Yep, those can be a lot of fun. Even just spray painting the plastic bottles. They are reactive enough with most calibers.small bottles of colored
water we make with food color.
We would take paint cans that were basically empty, fill with water, shake a little and hammer the lid down tightly. Then place the can lid side down and shoot with high-powered rifles. The cans would go 35-50' high and "make a pretty picture" (remember Oddball in Kelly's Heroes?).We used to fill milk jugs with water and a drop or two of food dye, then shoot them with high powered rifles. Of course, almost anything you shoot with a high powered rifle is pretty reactive...
You might want to look into getting a Texas Star; that's a lot of fun too.I like to hang steel plates by a single 2 foot chain. That way they start swinging side to side when hit and you have to try to hit them while moving. Fun with rifles and pistols. Its fun to do it at 200+ yards with a lower velocity rifle as you have to time the bullet travel time and shoot in front of it.
You might want to look into getting a Texas Star; that's a lot of fun too.
Yep, those can be a lot of fun. Even just spray painting the plastic bottles. They are reactive enough with most calibers.
And, I like the statement on not outdoing the kids.
Adults, though are fair game!
My wife's recipe is 12 drops of red & green , 14 drops of yellow , & so on. She had never heard of that idea & figured sheWe used to fill milk jugs with water and a drop or two of food dye, then shoot them with high powered rifles. Of course, almost anything you shoot with a high powered rifle is pretty reactive...
Wonder that didn't break the chains.True for 300 yards, but for handguns........it IS a lot of fun
One guy I used to know who shot a Browning BPCR in ??45-70?? (might have been a little bigger), had a steel gong made that was basically a rectangular steel box without a bottom; it hung from two chains on some form of hanging device so that when he hit it at 200 yards, not only did you see it move, it had a LOUD boing-type sound you could readily hear even with hearing protection.
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Not too exotic, but fun.
Wonder that didn't break the chains.
I have a 1/4" thick by 6" steel plate at 280 yards for 223 rifle & t/c pistol. Once upon a time one of my buddies had to try it with
his 22-250. It center punched thru the steel with no problem , the 223 will dent it good but nothing like that . Pretty sure its 1/4" thick.
Opened my eyes to the fact that a 22-250 is a 223 magnum, just like a 30-06 is a .308 magnum.
I had just got back into reloading then.
I made my father in law a couple 12" round 3/8" thick mild steel plate for him to shoot out of some scrap. High power rifles like a 223 or 270 put a pretty good crater in them but will not go through. I shot my 444 marlin about 12 times into one of them with a 320 grain hard cast which would knock over the target stand on every other shot. The 444 did not crater it but put dimples the size of golf ball in it and eventually turned the plate into a dish shape. One day I had my Mosin Nagant over there and put about 10 rounds into it at 100 yards with brown bear 208 grain soft points. Much to my amazement the steel jacketed soft point mosin rounds all went straight through it. Still can't comprehend how that mosin round goes through it when a 30-06 or 270 doesn't come even close. Must be the steel bullet jacket. If I shoot his mild steel targets with my 357 maximum contender pistol with hollow points it will indent a ring into the steel exactly the size of the hollow point on the bullet. All my plates at my house are 3/8 or 1/2 AR500 and nothing even puts a nick in them.
That reminds me of one I cannot believe I didn’t think of.
I bet I spent more than a hundred hours of my life when I was a kid shooting sycamore balls out of trees at our farm, with my Benjamin.
Lots of “exploding” targets and you don’t even have to clean up when you are done.
A before and after.
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And you can go through a tin of pellets on a single tree.
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I will show that pic to my son, he will want one.I train all the time with point and shoot. When not at the Powder burner range, I train in my Back yard with Pellet Pistols. I love to shoot shotgun hulls. They go flying. I also love to take out a Precision rifle and and wait for a slight windy day and shoot the center vein out of a leaf. Take time. One shot one kill. You really get in touch with Mother Nature and One with the gun.
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With Russian IZH Baikal and Bug Buster Scope.
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Nobody’s mentioned my favorite, walnuts. Every fall our walnut trees drop and we have several thousand green walnut husks. They are about 2” in diameter and explode if hit in the center. I simply put the on a fence post, 2x4 or whatever and go at it. Best part is no cleanup.
That reminds me of one I cannot believe I didn’t think of.
I bet I spent more than a hundred hours of my life when I was a kid shooting sycamore balls out of trees at our farm, with my Benjamin.
Lots of “exploding” targets and you don’t even have to clean up when you are done.
A before and after.
View attachment 779383
And you can go through a tin of pellets on a single tree.
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One for my friends in IT. Fast way to delete C:\
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