Quote:Pete:
Here be another set of flags what you can look at. I am kinda leaning towards these for myself.
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links) Glenn
Glenn, you will be very pleased with these. I own 5 of these and 5 of the Harris flags advertised on benchrest.com
The plastic material used in their construction is the best. As you know there are several grades of this stuff and the lower quality found at most sign shops does not weather well. These do. Mine are 4 years old, have been set in rain,and snow for 2 to 4 days at matches and have never warped. Indeed, I have a Harris Flag marking the site where I buried my shooting partner (my dog) at the range 3 years ago and I ocassionally have to borrow it when I've left my flags back home. Wilbur Harris shared a lot of info with Charlie when he first got into making flags. Both flags are fully adjustable for balance and Charlie's double vaned flags have stripes on the inside surfaces so reading angle is easy. Both breakdown for easy packing and are quick to assemble and disassemble - no excuses for not taking them with you to the range!
I use Wilbur's for certain ranges and Charlies for others. One thing I like about the Harris flags is I can place one at legal height (below bottom of target) and offset the rest by a foot or so to the left and 3 inches or so lower all the way back to the bench. Set up like this I can usually pick up the furthest 3 in the scope and the 2 closest and most important ones with my left eye. When the front ones indicate a favorable condition, I consult the 3 in the scope for confirmation or adjust for value and touch off the shot.
The Hood's can be set up like this as well but sometimes I feel the double vanes are too distracting and I spend more time looking when I should be shooting and miss a good condition or fail to observe a fatal change in condition.
If you can only afford, 3 flags, I'd recommend keeping them simple ones, like the Harris Flags, and learning how they react to varying conditions. I keep one in the backyard where I can see it from the livingroom. I will periodically look out at the flag, glance at the trees and grass and to correlate the effects. I've found this has improved my ability to read real world conditions in the field without flags.
Another tip, if using surveyors tape as a flag tail, go with the 3 mil thickness tape. Lowe's and Home Depot usually sell the thinner 1 and 2 mil tape. The heavier tape will drop faster to indicate a let up in the wind and will not react as wildly as the thinner stuff when the wind resumes.
One of the most accomplished bench rest shooters, Ed Watson, uses an unusual flag design that rarely lies. His flags are not much bigger than a pack of cigaretts, long edge parallel to ground and one short edge pointed, about 1/8 " thick, balsa mounted on pins about 1/32 dia. on top of music stand tripods weighted down on the bottom legs. The legs can be pushed into the ground to level the flag pole (very important to balance the flags so they are not gravity biased and swivel freely). The tails are multi strand , almost pinky thick yarn, knotted every few inches. These tails seem to give a more accurate indication of wind pick ups and let ups than either surveyors tape or grosgrain ribbon. By varying the number of strands , they can be tuned/weighted to the prevailing wind strength. As many as 6 of these flags can be positioned so all appear in the scope without obscuring the target.
The balsa vane itself is more of a visual indicator of direction as the tails actually weigh more and serve as the rudder for the wind to push against. This is just opposite of the vane function of other designs.
In other designs, the wind has to overcome the mass of the vane plus tail plus metal mounts and structure before the flag moves. I believe subltle but important condition changes have already occurred before the flag can react. Add some turbulence from a daisy wheel and the situation is not improved. Since Ed doesn't sell these flags, they are a homemade, yet simple and inexpensive, proposition! The hard part is finding suitable steel pins and making the mount from stand to pin. --- Tom