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Long Range Competition
2300 Yds. A Very Humbling Experience.
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<blockquote data-quote="mdslammer" data-source="post: 713370" data-attributes="member: 25638"><p>Cameras:</p><p>1 Go Pro Hero 2 </p><p>2 Panasonic HD Handy Cams: HDC-SD80 (42X Zoom) / HDC-SD60 (35X Zoom) </p><p>1 Panasonic HPX-170</p><p> </p><p>Go Pro used for mobile shots</p><p>1 Handy Cam is used for my Target Camera Setup which is framed ECU on the target only </p><p>The second Handy Cam was framed MS on the target and area around it to</p><p>show the misses.</p><p>The HPX-170 was POV/OTS from the shooter, CU and ECU of the shooter and any LS for surrounding topography.</p><p> </p><p>I use Premiere Pro CS5 as my editing suite.</p><p> </p><p>I'm the shooter in the Red T-Shirt. My rifle is a .338 Lapua Magnum. Yes, it does have a kick even with the break. I do have a lock on my bi-pod. And the reason it's not on the dirt is because of the serious amount of gas emitted side to side from the break. I have another packing blanket positioned to deal with that. In addition, there is a bubble on my NF Scope which I check each time to make sure my rifle is level horizontally before each round is fired.</p><p> </p><p> If you're interested, here's a link that has some pics of my target cam setup as well. It sends a video signal from the transmitter to the receiver back 2300 yds. The image is projected on my monitor in real time. No delay. Great for seeing exactly where your hits land on the steel.</p><p> </p><p><a href="http://markdalzell.com/targetcam.htm" target="_blank">Mark Dalzell</a></p><p> </p><p>Thanks for taking time to view and your kind words.</p><p> </p><p>Mark</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mdslammer, post: 713370, member: 25638"] Cameras: 1 Go Pro Hero 2 2 Panasonic HD Handy Cams: HDC-SD80 (42X Zoom) / HDC-SD60 (35X Zoom) 1 Panasonic HPX-170 Go Pro used for mobile shots 1 Handy Cam is used for my Target Camera Setup which is framed ECU on the target only The second Handy Cam was framed MS on the target and area around it to show the misses. The HPX-170 was POV/OTS from the shooter, CU and ECU of the shooter and any LS for surrounding topography. I use Premiere Pro CS5 as my editing suite. I'm the shooter in the Red T-Shirt. My rifle is a .338 Lapua Magnum. Yes, it does have a kick even with the break. I do have a lock on my bi-pod. And the reason it's not on the dirt is because of the serious amount of gas emitted side to side from the break. I have another packing blanket positioned to deal with that. In addition, there is a bubble on my NF Scope which I check each time to make sure my rifle is level horizontally before each round is fired. If you're interested, here's a link that has some pics of my target cam setup as well. It sends a video signal from the transmitter to the receiver back 2300 yds. The image is projected on my monitor in real time. No delay. Great for seeing exactly where your hits land on the steel. [URL="http://markdalzell.com/targetcam.htm"]Mark Dalzell[/URL] Thanks for taking time to view and your kind words. Mark [/QUOTE]
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2300 Yds. A Very Humbling Experience.
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