JerrySharrett
Senile Member
As to the rigidity of benches and frames, a strange setup to me is at the St Louis range. They have built the frames and reinforced them the best I have seen anywhere. The benches at St Louis have nice thick concrete tops and are sitting on 3 very large diameter concrete columns. Where the columns go into the benchtops are holes about 2" diameter than he columns. The void was filled with rubber foam. Doesn't have to be a rail, even when you set up a bench rifle, put the x-hair on a spot on the target, then lean against the bench, you can easily move the x-hair +/- about 2" at 100 yards.
As another comment. the Holton range copied the St Louis frame design which is of pipe welded and cross braced. On ranges that could leave frames in place this is a great design. Trouble is, and yes I have built ranges too, the locals show up, most without even a snit of target paper and start shooting at anything they can see in front of them.
My praises to the guys and gals who try to maintain a decent place to shoot in the environment that commonly exists at most gun clubs.
As another comment. the Holton range copied the St Louis frame design which is of pipe welded and cross braced. On ranges that could leave frames in place this is a great design. Trouble is, and yes I have built ranges too, the locals show up, most without even a snit of target paper and start shooting at anything they can see in front of them.
My praises to the guys and gals who try to maintain a decent place to shoot in the environment that commonly exists at most gun clubs.