Competition Ultimate Practice Shooting System: Shooting Inside
If you shoot, you need to practice shooting, whether you’re a wing shooter, a rifle shooter or a pistoleer. But practice time is hard to get in, if you don’t live close to a shooting facility. And ammunition is expensive. That’s where the new Competition Ultimate Practice Shooting System comes in—it lets you practice your wing shooting (well actually, your clay shooting) indoors, miles away from a skeet range, and without firing a shot.
Shooting practice @ TFB:
The Details
The Competition Ultimate Practice Shooting System comes with red and green LaserShooters, a LaserPro Moving Target Projector, a Wobbler, and a 9'x 54" Skeet/Trap Banner. Putting it all together, you can do target practice indoors.
In the video below, you can see how the components work together, with a demonstration at the end of the clip.
Basically, the Moving Target Projector displays images on the Skeet/Trap Banner, and the LaserShooter fits into the edge of your shotgun barrel, allowing you to simulate firing your shotgun at the moving target on the Skeet/Trap Banner. You can even add a second Moving Target Projector to practice doubles, and if you pay for the LaserPro Projectors, you get built-in mic circuitry that will display when you say “Pull.” As the company’s website says:
“You can simulate any kind of shotgun shooting, whether it's skeet, trap, sporting clays, five-stand, or live bird shooting. It's easy and convenient, and whether you're a beginner or a pro, there is no better way to get your repetitions to build muscle memory than to practice with our Ultimate Practice Shooting System (UPSS, for short). Use the LaserShooter to practice your mount and swing (also great for gun fit), the LaserPro if you want to shoot at a moving target, the Wobbler for more challenging and unpredictable arched or angled targets, and the Skeet and Trap Banner to put you in the zone.”
You’re practicing with your own gun, and you can get a lot of virtual shooting into a 15-minute session at no cost once you’ve bought the system. The makers say “Other than being on the range, there is no other method of practice as easy to use and effective in results.” You don’t have the gun’s recoil to get used to, but it does seem like a pretty smart way to practice wing shooting in a few spare minutes of each day, instead of maybe getting to a clays shoot once a week… unless the weather doesn’t cooperate, or your spouse has other plans, or…
You’ll notice that this is not a brand-new idea; it’s been on the market for a while. But as ammo supplies restrict further and further, it’s an idea that might be more practical than ever. See more deets at RobertLouisCo.com.
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$600 lmao
We cheap bastards just stick a MiniMag light into the barrel of our (unloaded) 12 gauge and practice on wall/ceiling creases.