B
benenglish
Guest
In the competition benchrest forum, Jackie Schmidt posted:
That got me thinking about stuff that would have been way off-topic in that forum, so I've posted here. To wit:
Big clubs with lots of members and low fees can have good facilities and (maybe) the budget to maintain them. They need lots of ongoing maintenance because they have so many members who don't follow the rules and do bad things at ranges. We've all seen centerfire cases on the rimfire firing line. I've seen centerfire cases left behind at ranges where supposedly only rimfires are allowed, period. Some members would love to shoot at bottles, glass bottles, glass bottles filled with gasoline, etc.
To illustrate - I once built a temporary 25-meter rapid fire pistol range for a U.S. shooting team (you know, the guys who go to the Olympics) qualifying event. The morning after I built it, I arrived at the range to find a local shooter merrily shooting holes in the base of the aluminum target frame, right where the control cables pass through the $25K mechanism. His bullets were landing about 2 feet from where the compressed nitrogen tanks were installed. His attitude was that if it was between the berm and the firing line, he had a right to destroy it by blowing holes in it. After all, we wouldn't have left all that machinery on the range if we didn't want people to shoot at it, would we? (I threw the guy off the range, took his identifying info, and let the NRA seek compensation from the club for the damage. It was one of the few times in my life when I was seriously tempted to initiate physical violence.)
In short, when your club gets big enough, there will inevitably be a too-large number of slobs in the member population.
Small clubs (the post that started this up was talking about the Tomball club) can have good facilities specialized to the needs of their core members and not need as much maintenance budget because they don't have so many members who are yahoos and destroy things for the sheer joy of unbridled nihilism.
We have both in the Houston area.
What we don't have are any clubs that follow a model that's common in Europe - charge $5000 (or more) a year for membership, provide super-premium facilities (with full time staff, restaurants, etc.), and maintain zero tolerance for any members who don't respect the facilities or their fellow members.
There are legal and cultural reasons that such clubs are rare in the U.S. I don't know of any, certainly none in my area (Houston). The most expensive club I know of is $200 a month, plus a $7500 buy-in, for their most premium membership. I doubt that even that figure approaches what it would cost to run a truly professional club; the club I'm talking about is attached to a large retail facility and makes most of its money from retail sales.
Club business models are all over the place, clearly. Just as clearly, truly high-quality ranges are expensive to build. (The airgun range, by itself, cost over a million dollars to build for the Atlanta Olympics.)
So could a "premium club" concept fly?
What do y'all think? Would you be willing to pay a premium for membership to a club whose facilities and culture matched your needs perfectly? What would that ideal club provide, what would it look like, and how much would you be willing to pay?
Or, asked another way, what's the perfect gun club concept (in your opinion) and how much do you think members ought to be willing to pay if you got your perfect club up and running?
Just curious,
Ben
..."large" ranges...are zoos.
...small membership is a big plus to shooters like Benchrest Shooters...
That got me thinking about stuff that would have been way off-topic in that forum, so I've posted here. To wit:
Big clubs with lots of members and low fees can have good facilities and (maybe) the budget to maintain them. They need lots of ongoing maintenance because they have so many members who don't follow the rules and do bad things at ranges. We've all seen centerfire cases on the rimfire firing line. I've seen centerfire cases left behind at ranges where supposedly only rimfires are allowed, period. Some members would love to shoot at bottles, glass bottles, glass bottles filled with gasoline, etc.
To illustrate - I once built a temporary 25-meter rapid fire pistol range for a U.S. shooting team (you know, the guys who go to the Olympics) qualifying event. The morning after I built it, I arrived at the range to find a local shooter merrily shooting holes in the base of the aluminum target frame, right where the control cables pass through the $25K mechanism. His bullets were landing about 2 feet from where the compressed nitrogen tanks were installed. His attitude was that if it was between the berm and the firing line, he had a right to destroy it by blowing holes in it. After all, we wouldn't have left all that machinery on the range if we didn't want people to shoot at it, would we? (I threw the guy off the range, took his identifying info, and let the NRA seek compensation from the club for the damage. It was one of the few times in my life when I was seriously tempted to initiate physical violence.)
In short, when your club gets big enough, there will inevitably be a too-large number of slobs in the member population.
Small clubs (the post that started this up was talking about the Tomball club) can have good facilities specialized to the needs of their core members and not need as much maintenance budget because they don't have so many members who are yahoos and destroy things for the sheer joy of unbridled nihilism.
We have both in the Houston area.
What we don't have are any clubs that follow a model that's common in Europe - charge $5000 (or more) a year for membership, provide super-premium facilities (with full time staff, restaurants, etc.), and maintain zero tolerance for any members who don't respect the facilities or their fellow members.
There are legal and cultural reasons that such clubs are rare in the U.S. I don't know of any, certainly none in my area (Houston). The most expensive club I know of is $200 a month, plus a $7500 buy-in, for their most premium membership. I doubt that even that figure approaches what it would cost to run a truly professional club; the club I'm talking about is attached to a large retail facility and makes most of its money from retail sales.
Club business models are all over the place, clearly. Just as clearly, truly high-quality ranges are expensive to build. (The airgun range, by itself, cost over a million dollars to build for the Atlanta Olympics.)
So could a "premium club" concept fly?
What do y'all think? Would you be willing to pay a premium for membership to a club whose facilities and culture matched your needs perfectly? What would that ideal club provide, what would it look like, and how much would you be willing to pay?
Or, asked another way, what's the perfect gun club concept (in your opinion) and how much do you think members ought to be willing to pay if you got your perfect club up and running?
Just curious,
Ben