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What Guy and Shade Tree do is how I do it. Milk jugs or water jugs are the same size and dimensions or very close. It's a lot of fun. I've shot into the jugs at 25-100-200-300-400- & 500 yards. At most distances I will put jugs beside the center shooter jug and line them up so they are all touching tight. That way if one strays out the side it will be caught. It's not as tough as you would think to hit and keep the bullets in jugs at 400 and 500 yards, plus it's excellent practice!Guy Miner":3rcwsg46 said:ShadeTree does it the same way I do, though I don't use a chute to keep the jugs lined up.
I used the jugs because we go through milk, so there's a ready supply.
The milk jug test can be duplicated by anybody. Ol' Scotty can set up jugs in Virginia and his test is comparable with mine out in Washington State.
Cleanup is a breeze. Pick up the plastic jugs & parts. The water goes away by itself.
I don't think the water jugs are the ultimate bullet test material, but they have some advantages. Other test materials have their own advantages and disadvantages.
Regards, Guy
gbflyer":24yelsjq said:Where the heck does a person even find a phone book these days?
mjcmichigan":2lbag6co said:Dr Mike,
When’s milk jug test season for you?
August 7th?
Just chuckling thinking about hitting frozen jugs.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Nowadays, just stack a few computer-screens ;-)gbflyer":1ec6huzh said:Where the heck does a person even find a phone book these days?
5shot":1ibgw1m4 said:One more follow up...Has a standard distance been agreed upon?