WootBot


quality posts: 14 Private Messages WootBot

Staff

Gear Up for Hunting

Hunting season's almost here! Time to take aim on some deals.

inkycatz


quality posts: 105 Private Messages inkycatz

Some familiar products in this lot to sport.woot fans (which gives you another chance at these, yay)- I'd love to hear about everyone's experiences with these!

I'm just hanging out, really.

yemicculus


quality posts: 1 Private Messages yemicculus

Will a red ryder BB gun spin the .22/.17 target? I know it doesn't have close to the same energy as an actual .22 or .17 cartridge, but a man can hope.

dtroy15


quality posts: 0 Private Messages dtroy15
yemicculus wrote:Will a red ryder BB gun spin the .22/.17 target? I know it doesn't have close to the same energy as an actual .22 or .17 cartridge, but a man can hope.


no way no how.

triplexcoast


quality posts: 0 Private Messages triplexcoast

I clicked on this to see if they had the pictured target. I have one and love it for my .22s. Want a second one to set out at different distance. But, alas, another woot plus where thy aren't selling the item shown in the photo.

p.s. they also have it put together wrong, the silver target is supposed to be above the cross bar. The red ones flip up when you shoot them then you shoot the silver one to reset them.

shavelikeaman


quality posts: 1 Private Messages shavelikeaman
yemicculus wrote:Will a red ryder BB gun spin the .22/.17 target? I know it doesn't have close to the same energy as an actual .22 or .17 cartridge, but a man can hope.


Do not use these with a Red Ryder BB gun! You WILL shoot your eye out. (I'm serious) Red Ryder's are pretty underpowed, but thats not the problem. The problem is RR's shoot BB's, not pellets. Pellets deform on impact and will typically fall straight down. BB's richochet and will often come right back at you. Never shoot at metal targets with BBs.

shavelikeaman


quality posts: 1 Private Messages shavelikeaman

I bought the Do All swinging .22/.17 target from a previous offering. I've been using it with a .177 air rifle. I can make the targets swing when I hit them but my gun doesn't have enough oomph to make them swing completely around. The metal is holding up well to the pellets but the paint is not. Every hit knocks a dot of paint off. You'll be repainting this often. I guess you could call it a feature because you can always see exactly where you hit.

Here's the one I bought:
http://sport.woot.com/offers/-22-triple-spinning-target-system

kane968


quality posts: 2 Private Messages kane968
shavelikeaman wrote:Do not use these with a Red Ryder BB gun! You WILL shoot your eye out. (I'm serious) Red Ryder's are pretty underpowed, but thats not the problem. The problem is RR's shoot BB's, not pellets. Pellets deform on impact and will typically fall straight down. BB's richochet and will often come right back at you. Never shoot at metal targets with BBs.



Second.

The copper BB will ricochet like Denzel Washington.

billyduncan1


quality posts: 0 Private Messages billyduncan1

So I'm assuming since they're rated for "soft nose lead bullets only" that factory FMJ and hollow points cannot be used. That rules out most ammo..correct me if I'm wrong..I'd like to be wrong so I can buy one.

paulbsa


quality posts: 2 Private Messages paulbsa

SC38 .38/.44 version
Pistol Calibers at a minimum distance of 30 yards

I don't know very many people who regularly target shoot pistols at distances starting at 30 yards. Most people shoot pistols at much closer ranges than this target would allow.

shavelikeaman


quality posts: 1 Private Messages shavelikeaman
billyduncan1 wrote:So I'm assuming since they're rated for "soft nose lead bullets only" that factory FMJ and hollow points cannot be used. That rules out most ammo..correct me if I'm wrong..I'd like to be wrong so I can buy one.



FMJ and Jacketed hollow points would be no go's.

As for ruling out most ammo, it depends what caliber you plan on shooting.


  • Nearly all .22LR will work, I've never seen a jacketed .22. Even the rounds that look like they are jacketed are just copper washed.
  • I've never shot .17HMR. I assume straight lead bullets exist, but can't say for sure.
  • Nearly every pistol caliber can be found with ordiary lead bullets, with revolver ammo being the easiest to find.
  • Centerfire rifle ammo is a differnet beast so you may have to do some homework. Straight lead bullets may be hard to find unless you reload. Jacketed soft points can be found easier in some calibers, but I don't know if those are ok to use.


To be fair, metal spinning targets are meant for plinking. And apart from AR-15s and the like, very little plinking is done with centerfire rifles. Its too dang expensive.


worldwidewebfeet


quality posts: 33 Private Messages worldwidewebfeet

I bought the camo camera but I can't find it after testing it.

newgen2003


quality posts: 1 Private Messages newgen2003
billyduncan1 wrote:So I'm assuming since they're rated for "soft nose lead bullets only" that factory FMJ and hollow points cannot be used. That rules out most ammo..correct me if I'm wrong..I'd like to be wrong so I can buy one.



FMJ would probably go right through. I've seen a .30-30 go through the same plate that a .38 was pinging. .38 wad cutters no hole. .30-30 semi jacketed, a clean hole.

omnitravis


quality posts: 5 Private Messages omnitravis

Where are the archery targets and skeet throwers? No love for shotgunners or oldschoolers. I guess you could sling a rock still, so not that old.

ishoplive


quality posts: 2 Private Messages ishoplive

Hunting also is a kind of outdoor activity, but I don't like it. Another activity is optional.

magichamsta


quality posts: 0 Private Messages magichamsta
worldwidewebfeet wrote:I bought the camo camera but I can't find it after testing it.



So...the camo is working as intended?
xD

mybestuser1


quality posts: 4 Private Messages mybestuser1

Do they have a target with a woot monkey that spins/ flies

Nothing is free but if you are lucky it can be inexpensive.