CMV
Platinum Member
And what size.....???
I'm going to hang steel targets along a winding 250 yd path I cleared along a creekbed with real high natural berms. Idea is to have a long lane you can walk down and engage targets with pistol, PCC, or AR with 22 conversion kit. Not going to be centerfire rifle distance. I'm thinking best way to do this would be 10-12" gongs with 1 hanging hole and use the T-post target hangers similar to Amazon.com: Steel Target Hanger, T Post AR5 / A36 Plate Mount: Home Improvement. Problem is the ground is pretty rocky and the hillside has lots of roots, vines. Just get a T-post driver at TSC and hammer away or is there a better way? Probably do about 25, and add on as funds for more targets available over time. Otherwise, I won't be installing T-posts for anything else - not doing a fence or anything later on.
The T-posts at TSC range from 3' to 10'. Ideally I'd want the target about 3-4' high. So does the size of the post mean once you drive it in the ground there is that much still sticking up? i.e bury the ears of a 4' post and the top is 4' above ground level or there's only 3' remaining above ground because you buried 1'? Seems to be 2 flavors - studded & light duty. Since I'm not trying to make a fence with livestock leaning against it, I'd want the light duty ones? Or I need the heavier ones so they don't get mangled if they hit a rock while driving into ground or don't rust away quickly?
And then real dumb question.....can I just get it started then just push it in with tractor bucket or do I just need to keep pounding them with the post driver until deep enough?
I'm going to hang steel targets along a winding 250 yd path I cleared along a creekbed with real high natural berms. Idea is to have a long lane you can walk down and engage targets with pistol, PCC, or AR with 22 conversion kit. Not going to be centerfire rifle distance. I'm thinking best way to do this would be 10-12" gongs with 1 hanging hole and use the T-post target hangers similar to Amazon.com: Steel Target Hanger, T Post AR5 / A36 Plate Mount: Home Improvement. Problem is the ground is pretty rocky and the hillside has lots of roots, vines. Just get a T-post driver at TSC and hammer away or is there a better way? Probably do about 25, and add on as funds for more targets available over time. Otherwise, I won't be installing T-posts for anything else - not doing a fence or anything later on.
The T-posts at TSC range from 3' to 10'. Ideally I'd want the target about 3-4' high. So does the size of the post mean once you drive it in the ground there is that much still sticking up? i.e bury the ears of a 4' post and the top is 4' above ground level or there's only 3' remaining above ground because you buried 1'? Seems to be 2 flavors - studded & light duty. Since I'm not trying to make a fence with livestock leaning against it, I'd want the light duty ones? Or I need the heavier ones so they don't get mangled if they hit a rock while driving into ground or don't rust away quickly?
And then real dumb question.....can I just get it started then just push it in with tractor bucket or do I just need to keep pounding them with the post driver until deep enough?