10 feet? The recommended minimum distances are 25 yards pistol, 100 yards rifle.Wear your safety glasses.
Don't use steel core ammo.
Stand back at least a 10 feet.
Follow the traditional rules for firearm safety.
There, now you're safe shooting steel.
Have a nice day.
What about frangible bullets? Ever use those? I have no experience with them myself.We shoot steel from 10 yards and beyond. Indoors we get hit with a lot of splatter when people shoot FMJ. Lead, lead coated or copper plated bullets are the safest.
What about frangible bullets? Ever use those? I have no experience with them myself.
What about frangible bullets? Ever use those? I have no experience with them myself.
Recommend by who ? Based on what research or engineering ?10 feet? The recommended minimum distances are 25 yards pistol, 100 yards rifle.
Angling the plates downwards will direct most of the fragments into the ground, using a free swinging mount such as chains will accomplish the same thing.
10 feet? The recommended minimum distances are 25 yards pistol, 100 yards rifle.
On a chain the plate moves back and angles downward as it swings and accomplishes the same thing as if it were rigidly mounted at a downward angle downward.Recommend by who ? Based on what research or engineering ?
Angling the plates a few degrees isn't a bad idea, but whether they are free swinging or rigid is irrelevant. If you look at the physics they are all effectively rigid. The plate weighs hundreds or thousands of times as much as the bullet, rigidly attaching it to a stand that together weighs a bit more doesn't matter.
If you run into a parked tractor trailer with your motorcycle, does it matter if it's in neutral or if the brake is set ?
Sounds about right to me.Those distances are more about not hurting the steel, not you.
That said, if you consider the steel to be a consumable...
Lead / plated pistol - 10 to 20 yards, but wear your eyepro 'cuz it'll be raining splattered lead
Copper jacket pistol - 25yd
Lead / plated rifle - 35 for small stuff, 50 for big stuff
Jacketed rifle - 50 for most, 75 for 300wm etc
Steel jacket pistol = 50
Steel jacket rifle = 75
Cheap steel jackets (Tula etc) are a spring. You'll find them in pristine helicopter shape with no lead on them, if you look.
The impact between the bullet and the plate is over in milliseconds. The plate doesn't move anywhere in that time, no matter how loosely it is held.On a chain the plate moves back and angles downward as it swings and accomplishes the same thing as if it were rigidly mounted at a downward angle downward.
The range figures are manufacturer ones.
A lot of people shoot rifle on steel at 50 yards safely but 10' is way to close for rifle.
Bullet construction is the big one for safety with steel.Those distances are more about not hurting the steel, not you.
That said, if you consider the steel to be a consumable...
Lead / plated pistol - 10 to 20 yards, but wear your eyepro 'cuz it'll be raining splattered lead
Copper jacket pistol - 25yd
Lead / plated rifle - 35 for small stuff, 50 for big stuff
Jacketed rifle - 50 for most, 75 for 300wm etc
Steel jacket pistol = 50
Steel jacket rifle = 75
Cheap steel jackets (Tula etc) are a spring. You'll find them in pristine helicopter shape with no lead on them, if you look.
I disagree with your assertion.The impact between the bullet and the plate is over in milliseconds. The plate doesn't move anywhere in that time, no matter how loosely it is held.
By the time the plate has swung 1 degree the remains of the bullet are already moving in whatever direction they are going to go.
In what way can the position of the plate at any time other than the couple milliseconds it is in contact with the bullet have any effect on the trajectory of the ricochet ?I disagree with your assertion.
I am repeating an industry claim that a flexibly mounted plate will direct bullet spatter to the ground via the deflection of the plate.In what way can the position of the plate at any time other than the couple milliseconds it is in contact with the bullet have any effect on the trajectory of the ricochet ?
Can I shoot all day, then when I'm done walk downrange and lay the plate flat and have that make a difference ? If the angle of the plate doesn't matter an hour after the event is over, why does it matter 1 ms later ?
BBs are hard steel projectiles. Might as well be shooting super bounce balls as it.last week i shot steel texas 5 star my bud just got .. with a BB gun ,, told him its defective .. i hit it and the BB hit me and the plate didn't fall ..
i'm old school .. if shit happens it happens ...
Probably don't use that stuff then.BBs are hard steel projectiles. Might as well be shooting super bounce balls as it.
You want stuff that will splash when it hits, not bounce back with no deformation.
That's why steel core ammo is dangerous to shoot steel with too.
BBs are hard steel projectiles. Might as well be shooting super bounce balls as it.
You want stuff that will splash when it hits, not bounce back with no deformation.
That's why steel core ammo is dangerous to shoot steel with too.