T
tricrown
Guest
The club we shoot benchrest at is shared with a much more numerous and lucrative group of black powder silhouette shooters that voted unanimously against us laying down a cement slab. We average a couple dozen people a shoot. They get much better than double that.
We currently shoot off of wobbly wooden benches that rest on the stones that the black powder boys like to lay on. So as an alternative to a cement slab we’re thinking of making solid benches by auguring in 3 posts with a triangle made from 2x6s on top and a couple support boards running from the top and bottom of the rear post to the center of the front posts. On top would lay a pre-fabbed cement benchtop. The benchtop needs to be able to be moved some on a few of the benches to shoot at targets that’ll be at different angles down range. As in 200, 300, 400, 500, and 800+ meters. 10’ apart will easily get all 10 needed benches under the roof and leave 6’ or so for all 8 silhouette shooters to lay or stand in between them.
Does anyone have any experience with benches of a similar design? How big and deep are the posts. I’m thinking 4X4s 3 feet down here in PA for the front and a 4x6 for the back should easily hold a 200 lb slab benchtop steady. Am I off by a lot?
Thanks,
Bill
We currently shoot off of wobbly wooden benches that rest on the stones that the black powder boys like to lay on. So as an alternative to a cement slab we’re thinking of making solid benches by auguring in 3 posts with a triangle made from 2x6s on top and a couple support boards running from the top and bottom of the rear post to the center of the front posts. On top would lay a pre-fabbed cement benchtop. The benchtop needs to be able to be moved some on a few of the benches to shoot at targets that’ll be at different angles down range. As in 200, 300, 400, 500, and 800+ meters. 10’ apart will easily get all 10 needed benches under the roof and leave 6’ or so for all 8 silhouette shooters to lay or stand in between them.
Does anyone have any experience with benches of a similar design? How big and deep are the posts. I’m thinking 4X4s 3 feet down here in PA for the front and a 4x6 for the back should easily hold a 200 lb slab benchtop steady. Am I off by a lot?
Thanks,
Bill