Meet Clay’s Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

in Authors, Clay Martin, Columns, Competition, USPSA
Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

The BC-C Zone from MGM is a versatile target.  Great for pistols as well as rifles.

More people have probably purchased firearms over the last eight years than any other time in our nation’s history (Thank you, Berry Obama, Gun Salesperson of the Century!).  But just because one owns a firearm doesn’t mean one is a shooter.  There’s a big difference.

With Trump now in office and the threat of confiscation sidelined for the foreseeable future, it’s time for all those new converts to learn how to shoot.  That’s right, get out those black rifles stashed in the closet, dig into that apocalypse stash of ammo in your basement, and get to the range!  It’s time to have some fun!

Things to Know When Shooting Steel

Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

You can see the official zones of the USPSA target. The outer D zones are great for competition, less so for self-defense practice.

This week I chose to do a review on one of the best training tools around, the BC-C Zone steel target from MGM Targets. Before we get jiggy with why I like this particular target, let’s take a moment to talk about shooting steel in general.

Despite what your mother may have told you about shooting metal or what you witnessed on Youtube (that dude getting his ear protection blown off by a ricochet), shooting steel is perfectly safe. A major caveat, it’s safe so long as you are shooting steel that was built to be shot. I make no safety guarantees when it comes to plinking washing machines and junkyard cars.

Hardened steel, with a flat face, does a near perfect job of absorbing all of a bullet’s energy. Ideally, the bullet flattens when it hits steel and any remaining energy is pushed down and slightly to the sides.

One of the biggest reasons we shoot AR500 grade steel with a smooth face is that it doesn’t deform and is very hard to dimple. If steel is deformed to the point of being either concave or convex, things can get weird. If you shoot a lesser grade of steel that becomes pitted or dimpled, it can absolutely start tossing chunks of bullet back at you. That’s a bad reality show.

As long as the steel is flat, smooth, and preferably slightly angled forward, all the bullets and fragments will hit the ground within about 5 meters of the target. Each manufacturer has a set of guidelines for their particular target systems.  Make sure you read them and follow them! That said, my personal experience goes something like this for minimum safe distances.

  • 10 meters for normal pistol (9mm, 40 S&W, 45 ACP)
  • 15 meters for magnum pistol (41 Mag, 10mm, 357 Mag)
  • 50 meters for small rifle (5.56)
  • 100 meters for medium rifle (308, 6.5 Creedmoor)
  • 300 meters for magnum rifle (300 WIN MAG)

Why I Like the BC-C Zone Target

In the video above, Clay gives you and overview of the BC-C Zone Target from MGM.  

Back to our BC-C zone targets. I really like this target for its versatility. They are light enough to carry with ease and are about 40 percent lighter than a full-sized USPSA torso target. Trust me, that differnce it weight matters when you are setting up the range yourself. The BC-C Zone is great for competition shooters as well as tactical shooters, as it mimics the vital area of a threat.

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Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

The BC-C Zone is very easy to transport.

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Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

BC-C Zone gets it’s name because it doesn’t include the outer D Zone of a traditional target.

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One of the biggest reasons we shoot steel is the instant feedback — that wonderful audible ting it gives us. But the problem with steel targets is that they sound the same whether you hit the center or the edge. You can paint your steel between every shooting evolution, but it doesn’t really change the point. Your brain processes every metallic ting as a good shot, so if you are shooting a barn door from three feet, you can very quickly develop a habit of bad sight pictures.

This is why you want an undersized target like the BC-C.  It forces you to make good shots within the margin of an acceptable hit radius.  When your brain processes that ting, it’s not only a good shot because you hit the steel, but it’s a potentially lethal shot in a self-defense situation.

BC-C Zone Dimensions & Pricing

  • Target plate: 11-13/16″ x 23-5/8″
  • Height: Adjustable with 2×4 length
  • Base: 18-1/4″ x 23-3/4″
  • Price: $315.34 (Target & Baseplate)
  • Price: $263.58 (Target)
  • Price: $51.48 (Baseplate)

I also like the fact that this target is on a 2×4 post. As a new shooter learning the ropes or an experienced shooter pushing the envelope, you are going to miss. Eventually, you are going to miss low and hit the support for the target. If your support post is steel, that means you are going to have to go back to the target manufacture for a new one.

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Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

The target hangs at a 30-degree angle so the frag is directed downward, not back toward the shooter.

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Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

You can purchase the baseplate and the target separately or as part of a package.

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Hopefully, you didn’t make the “magic miss” that embeds the now defunct target post into your target, requiring tools and labor to separate it. Shot through steel posts also tend to be sharp on the exit wound, which creates a hazard to your hands and your car’s interior. With a 2×4, once you shoot it enough to actually break it, you now have the kindling to start your next campfire. For $4.00 at the lumber yard, you have a replacement.

As to the use of this target, it covers a lot of bases. It is large enough for speed work with a pistol at 10 meters. It becomes a challenging shot with a pistol at around 50 meters, and at this range, it is ideal for rifle speed work as well. Like an AR-15 El Presidente drill. For rifle practice it is great at most any distance. I shoot these targets from 50m all the way to past 1000m with my precision rifles. With big boy bullets, the BC-C Zone still moves enough to see hits at long distances.

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Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

It takes a licking and keeps on ticking.

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Meet Clay's Favorite Target: The BC-C Zone from MGM

Who needs the D Zone anyways? LOL.

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Conclusion

The BC-C Zone is one of the most useful targets you will ever own and has been one of my favorites for years. Ninety-nine times out of 100, that is what I bring to the range for any type of gun review. It costs a little to get started, but acquiring a few of these targets will help you on your journey from becoming just a gun owner to an actual shooter.

For more information on the BC-C Zone, check out their website.

Special thanks to Hornady and American Eagle for providing the all important bullets this week.

About the author: S.H. Blannelberry is the News Editor of GunsAmerica.

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  • G. Gile April 21, 2017, 10:32 am

    Actually that look like the tonneau cover on the pickup box, notice the slide is locked back. Safer than locked and loaded but not safer than completely unloaded.

    Wind noise in the microphone is very distracting!!!

  • Tenbones April 21, 2017, 10:06 am

    Clay,
    Can you do something about the excessive wind noise in the microphone? Very distracting!

  • Peter Moore April 21, 2017, 9:51 am

    Why does Clay chamber and leave a loaded firearm unattended on the hood of his truck???
    Counterproductive to everything I was trained about firearns safety…

    • Tripwire April 21, 2017, 11:39 am

      Clay like a lot of former military people spent a lot of time in a war zone. He undoubtedly feels more comfortable with his weapons ready. I assure you if he was at a range he would not do that. I’m a former Marine and LEO and I have several weapons around me fully loaded at all times….Except on a cold range. I also don’t have people coming and going in my home and those who do are all well trained in weapons and knowing me well enough to be in my home they know any weapon is more than likely loaded.
      I strongly believe in gun safety but I don’t care for gun safety paranoia.
      The guy is out in the hills alone videoing a segment for GA, so what if he chambers a round and lays the weapon down.

    • Jonny5 April 22, 2017, 4:09 am

      Clay can do that because he is an awesome dude. He’s like a big cuddly bear.

  • jim April 21, 2017, 9:47 am

    Are you shooting M855 or 193 at your targets, Clay?

  • survivor50 April 21, 2017, 8:14 am

    I’ may recommend this to our “Steel Challenge Competition Shoot”. I don’t care for the “SPALL” we sometimes get back.
    “Steel, the only “TARGET” that shoots back…”

  • Jim Miller April 21, 2017, 7:51 am

    Informative article. An alternative source (where I have bought mine) is:
    https://shootingtargets7.com/store/
    About half the price quoted, flawless quality, fast shipping by Priority mail,
    and most of all, a friendly note from the owner prior to and after delivery.

    • t April 21, 2017, 11:49 am

      I’m sure there are a lot of good steel targets out there but for me MGM is not just a company that makes targets, they are a family and company that supports the gun community 100 %, the whole family are shooters and not just plinkers, they are competitive shooters and a couple of them are right at the top. They sponsor the IMHO top 3 gun event in the world ( yes, the world) the MGM Iron man match at Parma Id. They are sponsor at other matches around the nation, I’ve met a lot of the family and they are among the nicest folks out there.
      An AR500 steel plate is pretty ,much just that and can be made by almost anybody with the proper tools but the people behind the targets are what makes or breaks them and the MGM family are among the top.
      I didn’t mean this to be a rebuttal to the OP it’s simply my way as a shooter of thanking Mike Gibson and his family for all they do for the shooting world!

    • john creveling April 23, 2017, 10:19 am

      Great site Jim.If you have or can make your own stands this is the way to go.

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