May be OK for low usage. Will deteriorate fairly quickly. Best to use sand or sandy soil.Where I work, someone has the idea to use either power poles or railroad timbers for a target backboard to prevent constant rebuild cost.
I highly disagreed with it, as it's a big safety issue, especially with low velocity rounds, including muzzleloaders.
Opinions?
Around here, you can probably find some old rotten round bales that folks are looking to get rid of for next to nothing. Not very handy if you don't have a way to move them, but should be plenty to stop anything you want to shoot as long as your hits are pretty well centered.For muzzle loader velocities... Straw bales. Bottom row side-facing, top row end-on. I place my targets to line up with the top row. Once it rains and the bales get soaked, no round ball is going through them. I use a shipping pallet faced with 1/2 plywood in front of that stack. I have one stack at 25 yards, one at 50. If I want to shoot further I move my table back. Next spring, tear the bales apart, shake out the lead and collect then start over with new bales.
How do you staple targets to sand?May be OK for low usage. Will deteriorate fairly quickly. Best to use sand or sandy soil.
RR ties don't allow small arms penetration & the round usually ricochet. I've had .50 balls from pistol, & C&B rounds land at my feet. Practicing draw & shoot @20ft from the backstop. I've noticed particle board/OSB over the ties really absorb energy & capture more rounds..Seriously...
Sure they'll get shot up eventually. But a ricochet off them, extremely unlikely. Talking about RR ties, unless the rail plates are left on 'em.
Why not just put up two poles holding up a sheet of OSB and let the dirt bank catch the bullets? That’s what my range is like.
The above will obviously work, but I have found that unless one has complete control of who is shooting at a range, folks tend to not take personal ownership and just shoot up and destroy things.Exactly my plan!
Just crazy what non shooters were suggesting at work because the material is free.
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