B-2 versus B-16?
Posted: Wed Nov 08, 2017 9:50 pm
The B-2 is the NRA Official 50 Foot Slow Fire Pistol Target while the B-16 is it's 25 yard counterpart.
In 1979, I started shooting Bullseye in a league that held it's matches on a 50 foot indoor range. Ten
years later, I joined a different group that used a 25 yard indoor facility. Several unused B-2 targets
were recently found on a bookshelf. By eye, their bulls now looked exceedingly small. I conducted a
bit of online research on pistol target dimensions and performed some calculations. They were based
on the premise that the B-16's bull was of "standard size". Sparing you the math, here are the results.
The actual 25 yard bull is 5.32" in diameter. So, at 50 feet, the bull's calculated size should be 3.55".
However, it really is only at 3.07", which means that it is 0.48 inches undersize!
In order to keep the challenge/degree of difficulty consistent, I would have assumed that the bulls
would be proportional in diameter relative to the distances that they are engaged at. Apparently,
this is not the case. Is there any legitimate reason why 50 foot matches were made to be tougher
than those that are fired at 25 yards?
P.S. Performing the same math on the NRA Official Sustained Fire Targets also shows similar results. The
50 foot bulls are actually 0.63" smaller in diameter than their calculated sizes would indicate.
In 1979, I started shooting Bullseye in a league that held it's matches on a 50 foot indoor range. Ten
years later, I joined a different group that used a 25 yard indoor facility. Several unused B-2 targets
were recently found on a bookshelf. By eye, their bulls now looked exceedingly small. I conducted a
bit of online research on pistol target dimensions and performed some calculations. They were based
on the premise that the B-16's bull was of "standard size". Sparing you the math, here are the results.
The actual 25 yard bull is 5.32" in diameter. So, at 50 feet, the bull's calculated size should be 3.55".
However, it really is only at 3.07", which means that it is 0.48 inches undersize!
In order to keep the challenge/degree of difficulty consistent, I would have assumed that the bulls
would be proportional in diameter relative to the distances that they are engaged at. Apparently,
this is not the case. Is there any legitimate reason why 50 foot matches were made to be tougher
than those that are fired at 25 yards?
P.S. Performing the same math on the NRA Official Sustained Fire Targets also shows similar results. The
50 foot bulls are actually 0.63" smaller in diameter than their calculated sizes would indicate.