I have a swaro but that doesn’t help at 1000.Get a cheap spotting scope
Thank you. I’ve never tried it, I’ve always ran down between loads and that gets annoying real fast.I find the Sharpie method works great. I have not tried it beyond 300 so I cannot speak for long range shots.
I bout a set of red, yellow and green sharpies. And I find it noticeable enough where I can use a combo of two colors and still ID what is what. Opens you up to playing with a lot of load variations without running down range a ton.
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Why not get one of those camera/target viewing systems? Much cheaper than a Swarovski.I have a swaro but that doesn’t help at 1000.
That’s next on the list but it’s hard to justify those when it hardly gets used compared to the spotterWhy not get one of those camera/target viewing systems? Much cheaper than a Swarovski.
I have brown butcher paper, will that still work or will the color be hard to distinguish? I can’t find any white where I’m at. They had it at Chef’s Choice but it was $87 for 1000’!I shoot all my ladders with sharpies typically at 600 or 1000 yards and around 10 rounds. I put butcher paper over cardboard and it works well. Some of the colors don’t work as well as others and can be hard to sort out.
I read about that trick so I’ll take some of that with me as well.I would use white.
Sometimes a little alcohol on a qtip will show you some hard to tell holes.
Shoot n see targets
That’s correct.Shoot and see are great, but it’s nice to use one target and shoot 10-15-20 shots moving up in grain weight so you can look for pressure and try to find a sweet spot for me at 300 yards you can pickup some data this way. The marker helps differentiate the loads. Shoot and see only lets you see the hits, not what load hit where.
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You know that you can hang more than one target at a time, right?