1st View of the 100 yard range from Western end looking NE:

2nd view of the 100 yard range from 5th baffle looking SW back towards benches:

3rd view of the 100 yard range from same location but elevated perspective:
Baffles 2 - 5 are sloped down at a 20 degree angle going from South to North (shooting direction) and so are angled in the SAME plane as the natural sunlight at 45 degrees North latitude. During the Summer months the baffles will provide some shade, but during the Winter months the sun angle will hit them nearly edge on and cause very little shadow.

4th view of the 100 yard range from the East looking West at 5th baffle. Note that CURRENT entire project is compressed into 100 feet and 5 baffles, which is just 1/3rd of the range length, while the original project was a full 300 feet of walls both side and TEN baffles!

5th view of the 100 yard range from the East looking West under the 5th baffle. As noted above, this is NOTHING like a cave with all the sunlight blocked off.

View of the 100 yard range from a shooting bench, which is the ONLY position permitted during OPEN Public hours. Do not confuse with shooting during matches shot by non-members, which will be unaffected. This is the "no blue sky" view. The bullet gets a choice of hitting the baffles OR the target area. All other choices, no matter how bad a mistake a public shooter makes, are permanently GONE!!

View of the 100 yard range from shooting prone. Elevation of maximum bullet strike is higher behind target, but it still will hit dirt no matter what!! In addition, almost all of the prone shooting will be matches of one sort or another, so if you even miss THE PAPER your shooting buddies are going to be rubbing your nose in coming in dead last in the match, and offering you the option to trade in your target for the broad side of a barn. Now THAT's punishment!!

View of the 100 yard range from the targets. Doesn't look at all like the exercise yard at the Supermax in Oak Park Heights, does it??

View of the Short Range looking from the parking lot to the NE. Goodbye swamp, goodbye standing in the mud like a farm hog, goodbye standing in the rain, goodbye to 4 shooting benches with 8 people wanting to shoot, and goodbye to bullets bouncing off that rocky backstop and going all over the place!!

View of the short range from one of the stalls, and the partitions are removable so the Bobcat can get in and repair the backstop as necessary. Note the black rubber soundproofing on the partition walls and also full coverage on the slab above. Also note no blue sky from the line!! Just like the 100, you get a choice of baffles or backstop. All other options went bye-bye!!

View of the Short Range from the backstop, and the slab below. No more picking your brass out of the hog pen!!
