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Homemade Archery Targets

by , Posted to on 03/13/2010 4:36 PM | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/01/2005
Location: ND
I'm beginning to ponder building an archery target. I'd like to do something large but mobile. I've got a couple of the smaller layered targets but I'd like something bigger so I can practice at 70 to 120 yards. In the Red River Valley, there are no backstops. If you flinch and miss the target, that arrow is gone. I'm thinking something with a face as large as 40"x40". If anybody has any ideas or has built a target before, please share your input. Or maybe there's a less expensive alternative to spending $200 on a supersized version of The Block? Thanks!
- A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
- Meat is murder... tasty, tasty murder. - a really sweet t-shirt
- Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for yourself.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/13/2010 7:18 PM | Reply #1 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 09/01/2003
Location: ND
years ago I had a stacked cardboard target.  two 4X4s, piece of plywood, stack of cardboard (mine was about 45 inches wide, 12 inches deep and 50 inches high), another piece of plywood and two more 4X4s.  I put ready rod in the four corners to compress the cardboard until I got 12 to 15 inches of penetration.  I put wagon wheels on it to move and yes it is heavy but it lasted over 10 years.  The last 7 or so years it was outside year round.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/13/2010 9:04 PM | Reply #2 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/15/2003
Location: ND
How much would you guys say it costs to make an average size layered target? I was thinking of using those thin foam insulation panels, I think they are 4x4. 

I was anti-Obama before it was cool

Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/13/2010 9:14 PM | Reply #3 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/13/2006
Location: ND
 I built one 4 wide by 6 high about 10-12 inchs thick. It is carpet front and back stuffed with plastic grocery bags. The whole thing is on large 8 inch castors so I can move it with the mower. It works great. I have used it for 2 years know. Takes a lot of bafs though! Got mine out of the grocery store recycling bin. The plastic stuffing is nice as it is light and stays dry. I use a smaller bag target in front sometimes and use the large one as a backstop. I was shooting at 90 yards last summer. It is great fun, takes the boredom out.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/13/2010 10:08 PM | Reply #4 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/01/2005
Location: ND

While I am certainly interested in everyone's DIY archery targets, for the purposes of this particular experiment I'm thinking something weighing about 70 lbs or less. I currently live in town so I can't expect to be shooting around the neighbors. I usually just head somewhere west of the Sheyenne diversion and park on a section line. I need something I can easily load and unload from an SUV or pickup.

It seems to me that the targets used for competition are made of tightly rolled and coiled rice straw. I think I've seen indoor range blocks made of commercially produced straw blocks. I'm not sure how those would hold up over time. Anyone know where I might track down a whole lot of heavy duty foam? I've tried the plastic-stuffed burlap already. I need something that holds the arrow better. That's why I'm thinking layers or straw.

- A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
- Meat is murder... tasty, tasty murder. - a really sweet t-shirt
- Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for yourself.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/13/2010 10:18 PM | Reply #5 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/09/2002
Location: ND
A pile of sand can be had for about $50.

When I was a bit younger, we would shoot pretty regularly at cardboard boxes set up in the sand piles at the local gravel pits.  Never lost a single arrow doing that, nor do I recall ruining many.

Buy a few yards of sand is my suggestion.
“Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.” ~ Mark Twain
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 11:35 AM | Reply #6 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/29/2009
Location: ND
Allen Said:
A pile of sand can be had for about $50.

When I was a bit younger, we would shoot pretty regularly at cardboard boxes set up in the sand piles at the local gravel pits.  Never lost a single arrow doing that, nor do I recall ruining many.

Buy a few yards of sand is my suggestion.
Great idea!  Shovel a few yards of sand in the back of your truck, head out West of the Sheyenne diversion, shovel it off, do your shooting.   When done shovel the sand back onto your truck, take it home and unload it so you can use it again next time.

So obvious, I can't believe I didn't think of that first.   Hmmmmmmmmm.

Now I know......my half ton truck ain't big enough to haul a few yards of sand.

Genius idea for a portable shooting target.  :) 

"Lifes tough pilgrim, and it's even tougher if you're stupid"  --John Wayne
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 2:39 PM | Reply #7 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/01/2005
Location: ND
guns4ever Said:

Now I know......my half ton truck ain't big enough to haul a few yards of sand.

Genius idea for a portable shooting target.  :) 


Play nice, Guns4ever.  We're gonna have more sandbags than we can count by this time next month. Using sand is not a bad idea at all, just doesn't suit this particular project.

That does raise an interesting point. If a guy wanted to build a permanant archery or rifle shooting backstop, this time of year is a great time to pick up sandbags! Just give it another month or two.
- A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
- Meat is murder... tasty, tasty murder. - a really sweet t-shirt
- Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for yourself.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 3:39 PM | Reply #8 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/09/2002
Location: ND
guns4ever Said:
Allen Said:
A pile of sand can be had for about $50.

When I was a bit younger, we would shoot pretty regularly at cardboard boxes set up in the sand piles at the local gravel pits.  Never lost a single arrow doing that, nor do I recall ruining many.

Buy a few yards of sand is my suggestion.
Great idea!  Shovel a few yards of sand in the back of your truck, head out West of the Sheyenne diversion, shovel it off, do your shooting.   When done shovel the sand back onto your truck, take it home and unload it so you can use it again next time.

So obvious, I can't believe I didn't think of that first.   Hmmmmmmmmm.

Now I know......my half ton truck ain't big enough to haul a few yards of sand.

Genius idea for a portable shooting target.  :) 


Ha ha ha, forgot about the want for it to be portable. 
“Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.” ~ Mark Twain
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 4:44 PM | Reply #9 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/01/2005
Location: ND
Hmmm... What about fiberglass insulation layered and packed tightly? Maybe just throw a rug on the front and back faces to keep it from stringing out. That could make for an itchy target... Any thoughts?
- A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
- Meat is murder... tasty, tasty murder. - a really sweet t-shirt
- Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for yourself.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 5:03 PM | Reply #10 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/13/2006
Location: ND
 For portable I would use the 12"x12"x16" foam blocks I get from the local TSC store for free ( from trailers)Strap as many as you want together with a nylon ratchet strap and you are good to go. I strap 20 together for long range broadhead shooting. As the center ones start to get shot out I move them to the outside, Strap them down to a 1/2 strip of plywood and maybe a light brace and you are good to go. Very light. I hesitate to post this cause I dont want any competition for the blocks!
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 10:30 PM | Reply #11 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/07/2008
Location: ND
There's a couple different things I've seen that work really good.

Layered carpet is one of the most common.  It only needs to be 18-24 inches deep, and you can cut it and stack it as wide and/or high as you like.  I don't know how "portable" you are looking for, but you would obviously need to build some kind of wheeled stand you can use to move the thing up and down your range. If you don't have a "range" this would be a tough one to do.

Secondly are old clothes.  If you gather up as many as you can from thrift stores and jam them down in large sacks, they work well as a target. However, you need to make sure that you remove all the zippers and buttons. They will wreck arrows. I've seen one of these made out of a soybean tote from the elevator. It was chuck full of clothes. It worked great, and arrow removal was pretty good. Every now and again you'd have a arrow that the clothes would wrap around but it was few and far between.

Third, is furniture batting and the same concept. 

OR.....if you can stomach it....buy an American Whitetail FITA mat.  They are spendy, and you need to use an arrow lube for awhile when the target is new, but it is an awesome target.  They also have a replaceable center in them. The target itself is 52" circle and I believe a 24" replacable core. 


Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 11:23 PM | Reply #12 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/01/2005
Location: ND
Yes, the FITA mats would be AWESOME. I just chatted with my brother-in-law tonight about building a large layered carpet target. Cheap, effective, and easy to make. Not to mention, you can make a carpet target just about as large as you want. Definately not a mobile target. One guy online built one 3 x 3 x 1 feet and estimated that it weighed 125 to 150 lbs.

I did find a large commercially made target that might not break the bank:

http://www.biggreentargets.com/field-point-foam-targets.html

The big one is 28 x 28 x 14 and it runs $70. However, it only weighs 30 lbs. I have a feling that I might knock it over with one shot. Anyone have any experience with these targets?
- A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
- Meat is murder... tasty, tasty murder. - a really sweet t-shirt
- Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for yourself.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/14/2010 11:30 PM | Reply #13 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/28/2008
Location: ND
 i made a good portable target out of a bunch of old clothes in a garbage bag.  i used a few garbage bags just to keep it from falling apart too easily.  best thing is that you can re-wrap the bag if it gets to be in rough shape.  you definitely will need some sort of back stop though.....i lost two arrows before i threw it in front of the sand pile in my yard.
 
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/15/2010 00:46 AM | Reply #14 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 11/01/2005
Location: ND
dw_03 Said:
  you definitely will need some sort of back stop though.....i lost two arrows before i threw it in front of the sand pile in my yard.
The whole point of this is to build a large target because THERE ARE NO BACKSTOPS IN THE RED RIVER VALLEY. If you drive outside of Fargo it is absolutley flat as a pancake until you run into either the grasslands in the SE corner of the state or Valley City.

Basically, you drive down a section line, park your vehicle and pace off where to set your target. If you flinch, that arrow is gone. I've recovered arrows 150-200 yards beyond the target. Hence, why i need a large target. You want to take 80 yard shots at a 16 x 20 target with no backstop? Nothing like losing $50 or $75 worth of arrows before the season even starts. You don't get to be good at 60 yards without practicing at 80.
- A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
- Meat is murder... tasty, tasty murder. - a really sweet t-shirt
- Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for yourself.
Re: Homemade Archery Targets
by on 03/15/2010 08:25 AM | Reply #15 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 03/09/2009
Location: ND
Sometimes spending a little cash is worth your time and trouble in the end.  I've been thinking about one of these for a year or so now, they look pretty slick.

www.bupsports.com/

Posted By: walkswithwhispers
Posted On: 03/13/2010 4:36 PM
6114 Views, 28 Comments
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