Thanks for this - had googled but not picked up some of those options.I don't know anyone that has built their own running boar setup, but there are several YouTube videos advocating the use of an old tyre (with cardboard target in its centre) rolled down a hill, or a target suspended beneath an inclined wire. Frankly to me both solutions appear pretty Mickey Mouse.
Have you looked at the price of a Laporte (France) running boar setup? Running Boar - Laporte Clay Shooting Sports
If affordable perhaps you and your fellow shooters could club together to buy it. It does suggest on their website that it can be installed in 90 minutes and that it can be set up on uneven ground. You might even be able to recover some of the costs by hiring out your range to other villages/syndicates.
Alternatively there's also Promatic (British) Running Boar | Promatic International Ltd
I think their system requires a far more solid fixed base and it's quite expensive but is reputedly quite good.
Lastly there's SIUS AG | Electronic Target Systems, Effretikon, Official ISSF Results Provider
They set the standard but at a high price. Perhaps they have a budget system for situations just like yours, maybe worth making a few enquiries?
Hoping to get something full bore together, done some basic training with a closeline 22lr job before and its too easy. Need to feel whats its like to get 2nd shot off and on target from a 30-06 or 300rm...Surely the answer is get an air rifle and build a 10m setup in your shed?
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I would add that while im looking for an eco solution for a small village hunt, any training will be done v carefully in a suitable location with several qualified instructors....Hoping to get something full bore together, done some basic training with a closeline 22lr job before and its too easy. Need to feel whats its like to get 2nd shot off and on target from a 30-06 or 300rm...
With a speed of 42 feet per minute it would be more of an ambling boar than running boar!You’re too late for this but it would have done the job with enough turns and assistance from a friend:
Thread 'Simpson capstan winch'
Sold: - Simpson capstan winch
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Ha ha, indeed - i actually have a similar winch was thinking of gearing it up. I've got some decent steel cable and pulleys, right now thinking of some way of getting the winch to wind the target back and forth. Or just one way if its sloped zip wire style...With a speed of 42 feet per minute it would be more of an ambling boar than running boar!
Where I worked before there was a hand winch set up using paracord and a couple of wooden reels. The RCO could stand behind the shooters and wind like crazy to get a target to move across the backstop. It wasn't very fast and only 25m away.Ha ha, indeed - i actually have a similar winch was thinking of gearing it up. I've got some decent steel cable and pulleys, right now thinking of some way of getting the winch to wind the target back and forth. Or just one way if its sloped zip wire style...
I think both those ideas featured on an episode of Fieldsports Britain, not so long ago.Cheap remote control car with a cardboard boar silhouette attached and driven back and forth across a good backstop.
You could sit the car in a trough or track to ensure it's going in a straight line.
Instead of a cardboard target use a helium filled balloon tied to the car and would probably reduce the chance of hitting the car by mistake.
Yes I was thinking of Tim Pilbeam's range near me that I've used and he has a similar set up there he uses for filming and testing.I think both those ideas featured on an episode of Fieldsports Britain, not so long ago.
The "have a go" running boar at the Chambord French game fair used to be like that, nylon bullets (Sologne ammunition) and straw bales. The targets were mounted on petrol driven remote control cars.I did shoot a running boar at the French Rambouillet Hunting Fair back in about 2016 using a Sauer 100 and Sauer straight pull using plastic bulleted 7x64 ammunition. The backstop there were simple rectangular straw bales.
