Best and most economical timer for bullseye? ...a Newbie...
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Best and most economical timer for bullseye? ...a Newbie...
Hi there,
I did check the archives but maybe it is too basic a question. I am just starting bullseye with my first match in January; what is a good basic timer that is reasonably priced and what should I look for in features?
Al responses are greatly appreciated! Thanks, magi
I did check the archives but maybe it is too basic a question. I am just starting bullseye with my first match in January; what is a good basic timer that is reasonably priced and what should I look for in features?
Al responses are greatly appreciated! Thanks, magi
Congrats on entering your first Bullseye match -- that's exciting!
For me, the most practical starting timer was one I picked up in the kitchen section of my local store. Years ago with all the travel I did, I knew the wear and tear (crazed baggage handlers!) would eventually affect the timer, so I didn't want to invest a whole lot of moolah into something expensive. For my needs, I got one that counted up by the minutes to let me know if an hour had already passed.
The two disciplines I use the timer for is air and Free. The rest is controlled by the match director, so I don't worry about it.
Now, I have a "nicer" version with other features. It also counts backwards from say 1 hour 15 minutes, as an example.
Best of luck -- hope you have fun!
For me, the most practical starting timer was one I picked up in the kitchen section of my local store. Years ago with all the travel I did, I knew the wear and tear (crazed baggage handlers!) would eventually affect the timer, so I didn't want to invest a whole lot of moolah into something expensive. For my needs, I got one that counted up by the minutes to let me know if an hour had already passed.
The two disciplines I use the timer for is air and Free. The rest is controlled by the match director, so I don't worry about it.
Now, I have a "nicer" version with other features. It also counts backwards from say 1 hour 15 minutes, as an example.
Best of luck -- hope you have fun!
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- Location: Ottawa, Canada
While not as cheap as a kitchen timer, the following is very useful and many shooters and clubs use these them good sucess. The quality of these units is excellent.
http://www.targettimers.com/timers.html
Brian
http://www.targettimers.com/timers.html
Brian
Re: Best and most economical timer for bullseye? ...a Newbi
You don't really say but so far the assumption is you are looking for a timer for slow fire, which runs for up to 10 minutes. For that the kitchen type timer is good but be sure and disable the buzzer part as nothing that makes any noise is allowed on the line. With many you can set the timer to count up so no alarm goes off if you don't want to cut the wires.magi wrote:Hi there,
I did check the archives but maybe it is too basic a question. I am just starting bullseye with my first match in January; what is a good basic timer that is reasonably priced and what should I look for in features?
Al responses are greatly appreciated! Thanks, magi
If you are looking for a timer for training for timed and rapid fire the easiest way is to download the mp3 files from www.bullseyepistol.com and load them on any player with the ear buds under your muffs.
Clark
timer for bullseye
I really like the old kodak timer that was manufactured for dark rooms. it is about 3 inches in diameter so I can see it (as opposed to a 1 inch diameter stopwatch). It is analog which calms me inbetween shots and it is windup-no batteries. I have a couple that I got offa ebay. bolted it to my pistol box so it is right below my spotting scope.
Thanks to you all for the info..I just googled shooting supplies and found Midway has one for $16 that can be audible, silent or vibrate. That sounds practical; I really just want it for practicing slow, timed and rapid fire so I can get dialed in to a rythm and not fire the last round into empty space!
Thanks for the encouragement too...
magi
Thanks for the encouragement too...
magi
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+1little_doodie wrote:for timed and rapid I use a digital recorder that I have the range commands and buzzers on. i downladed the mp3's and recorded from my pc the commands. The digital recorder costs about $30 and it holds every command I need. It fits well in my pistol box and it really simulates a real match.