Author Topic: Homemade Field Target  (Read 986 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline mjfa

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 138
Homemade Field Target
« on: August 15, 2004, 05:17:56 PM »
Tired of expensive ($40+)  weak Field Targets that do not resist the sustained shooting of heavy magnum airguns, I decided to make myself a heavy duty one.  Recently I finished this first prototype entirely made of some steel scraps and a pair of 4" door hinges, which costs me close to nothing and took a couple of hours to complete it.  The base is an 8 inch square of 1/2" thick steel plate.  The crow silhouette was plasma cutted from 1/8" thick steel plate and the kill zone was cutted with a 1-1/2" diameter hole saw from a 1/4" thick steel plate.  Other parts are a 3/8" hex nut fashioned as a sear to firmly engage the kill zone disk an prevent the crow from falling when hitted out of the kill zone,  three pieces of 1/2" diameter steel rod for the kill zone support and as crow's counterweight for positive fall, and a short piece of 1/16" stainless steel wire to hook the resetting string.  Everything was assembled together with electric arc welding.  It is heavy at around 15 lbs so I don't see the need to stake it down because it doesn't seems to displace when hitted.  I have limited shot tested it with a .22 cal Logun/Domin8or shooting 21.1gr Beeman Kodiak pellets at velocities up to 850+ fps from 20 yards for 50 hits inside the kill zone and 50 hits on the crow's silhouette without a single malfunction so far.
Once I heavily tested it will post shop drawings for anybody interested in build his/her own.



Offline mellow_1

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 44
Homemade Field Target
« Reply #1 on: August 15, 2004, 08:28:49 PM »
cool sillouette, great idea. I have never seen one quite like that before.

Offline Chris

  • Moderator
  • Trade Count: (1)
  • Contributor
  • *****
  • Posts: 462
Homemade Field Target
« Reply #2 on: August 16, 2004, 05:37:33 PM »
Sweet! :agree:

Holler back once you get your shop drawings together.  I'd like to make one or two perhaps utilizing a groundhog silhouette.  Paper punching is fun...but it's nice to get some immediate feedback too.

Great job!  ...Chris    :D
"An intellectual is a man who doesn't know how to park a bike!" Spiro Agnew