Trying some different shooting fun this week.
Fulfilling another viewer's request for my percussion shooting friends, enjoy:
Fulfilling another viewer's request for my percussion shooting friends, enjoy:
I’ve shot through both sides of a junked car.Mark, That's pretty wild. Can we infer it would go through a typical car door?
Trying some different shooting fun this week.
Fulfilling another viewer's request for my percussion shooting friends, enjoy:
That is something I'm wanting to try soon....Mark, That's pretty wild. Can we infer it would go through a typical car door?
This is true.Enjoyed the video and I think less powder would get the job done if the target was fixed where it would not swing as the swinging absorbs a lot of the energy from the bullet
Well, that whole thing was just to make another entertaining "Maniac" video. Any real test would have been done with a good sized new piece of steel of a known thickness firmly secured.Has anyone ever thought what happens to the bullet that hits one of those big dents and doesn't go through the steel? Our friend the OP will eventually find out the same way I've seen dozens of unlucky shooters before him with a trip to the ER to have fragments or worse pulled out of his flesh. There is a REASON to only shoot at undamaged HARDENED steel..... safety. This guy is living on borrowed time.
Has anyone ever thought what happens to the bullet that hits one of those big dents and doesn't go through the steel? Our friend the OP will eventually find out the same way I've seen dozens of unlucky shooters before him with a trip to the ER to have fragments or worse pulled out of his flesh. There is a REASON to only shoot at undamaged HARDENED steel..... safety. This guy is living on borrowed time.
I'm more afraid of a dried out dead Locust or Elm stump sending a ball back than any steel target. Brother Steve caught a lead .45 Colt in the chest off an Elm stump from about 10 yards, didn't break the skin but it left a welt. My poor old home made 75 yard Davis Tutt steel hanger is pretty well bowed from all the hits. The Whitworth with Linotype bullets is particularly hard on it I've only seen one guy hit shooting steel, it was a piece of jacket from a very hot Commie pistol round. Bounced back a good 15 yards off AR500 and nicked him in the ankle drawing a bit of blood. As I said it was a hot round at 1600 or so FPS.Has anyone ever thought what happens to the bullet that hits one of those big dents and doesn't go through the steel? Our friend the OP will eventually find out the same way I've seen dozens of unlucky shooters before him with a trip to the ER to have fragments or worse pulled out of his flesh. There is a REASON to only shoot at undamaged HARDENED steel..... safety. This guy is living on borrowed time.
Last I checked, we ALL are!…This guy is living on borrowed time.
Had a 38spl. unmentionable wad cutter tickle my ribs from a little less than 15 yards. Backstop was a mostly rotten white oak stump.I'm more afraid of a dried out dead Locust or Elm stump sending a ball back than any steel target. Brother Steve caught a lead .45 Colt in the chest off an Elm stump from about 10 yards, didn't break the skin but it left a welt. My poor old home made 75 yard Davis Tutt steel hanger is pretty well bowed from all the hits. The Whitworth with Linotype bullets is particularly hard on it I've only seen one guy hit shooting steel, it was a piece of jacket from a very hot Commie pistol round. Bounced back a good 15 yards off AR500 and nicked him in the ankle drawing a bit of blood. As I said it was a hot round at 1600 or so FPS.
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