great ideaI am in the process of setting up a shooting box myself. I found a wooden bread box in an antique store. When I get the box refinished and add a couple of handles it will be my shooting box.
great ideaI am in the process of setting up a shooting box myself. I found a wooden bread box in an antique store. When I get the box refinished and add a couple of handles it will be my shooting box.
Hey man could I have my box back? Just kidding. That is the nicest one I have seen. I bet if you took that to a competition shoot guys would beat you up and take it. lolI was feeling "crafty one day, and puth this together. Its been 10 yrs and still going strong.View attachment 136156View attachment 136157View attachment 136158View attachment 136159View attachment 136160View attachment 136156View attachment 136157View attachment 136158View attachment 136159View attachment 136160View attachment 136166View attachment 136167View attachment 136168View attachment 136169View attachment 136170
Now that is a box!! Very niceI built this clam shell design out of walnut and 1/8" birch ply. It works quite well for my use. I have different base pieces for different pistols that I use. The pistol shown here I built for competition. It easily changes from flint to percussion.
I think for any design you want to build it is necessary to decide just what you think is essential for a day of shooting. Pile all of those items on a table in front of you and it will give you a good idea of the size box you want to build.
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That's where I'm at now. At the range where I typically shoot, the covered firing line is about 25 yds from the parking lot. So there's no need for a range box that requires a skid steer to transport. I was using a large canvas tool bag I'd got from Lowes. Really great. Multiple outside pockets, two large internal compartments, even some loops at the top I could carry my 1-piece ramrod in. But I never used about 75% of the stuff I put in it: different pairs of shooting glasses for different lighting conditions, extra canister of powder, bunch of extra tools "just in case", spray bottles of every possible liquid I might "need", etc. I also finally figured out that I don't really need to pack my spotting scope and Creedmoor stand along with everything else and can carry it separately. So I still take some of that extra stuff ("just in case"), but have now gone minimalistic. If I were shooting multiple guns, it would be a different deal to at least some degree, but I tend to keep totally separate sets of stuff in that case anyway, and so would probably opt for two "minimalistic" range boxes, where one would hold the "common items". Striving for simplicity at this point.For the range I used a large wooden box for many years. Because it was so large I kept adding stuff until it nearly needed a V8 and wheels to transport. I finally got a used tackle box and eliminated a lot of the heavy stuff. Much more better. In the field or at ronny I use a standard shooting bag.
There's a fellow that goes by Spider over on another forum who makes real nice range boxes. From pine to Osage Orange, on type is a flat top and the other is a slant front. Both can store up to two, 1 pound containers of powder too.
I've got four of them, which is probably too many but life is short.
I though I had a picture of my boxes but I can't find them right now. I'll do some more searching and give you the builder's info via PM if anyone is interested.
I am a frugal / cheep bugger. I have for many years used a PLASTIC TACKLE FISHING BOX. works for me.
A few of my friends have bought a box from Harbor Freight, take a look at their stock. I made this one based on dimensions I took from one at a BP shoot.Hey y'all, I am in desperate need of a shooting box. I don't want a plastic box, or anything too modern looking. I am not planning on storing any guns in it. Do y'all have any recommendations on a range box?
That's the facts, Jack!Don't need no stinkin spotty scope when you shoot 58 and 69cal
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