What the best way to stop bullets. Indoors? I need about 15ft wide.
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Not everyone are a******s. They'll probably tell you.Originally posted by MERCTECH View PostYes but then I thought they probably wouldnt help me because they would lose my business.
Yeah, that, backed up by sheet steel, maybe angled at 45°, just in case some rounds get through. You don't want to be perforating your basement wall!Originally posted by paul34 View PostSandbags? Works for the military.
Very interesting...
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Been there, done that.
phone books packed tightly in paper boxes.
I would suggest two sets with an offset.
Then something solid, just in case.CISSP, CISA, CRISC, ISSO with lots of experience looking for a IT Security Manager spot. I prefer working for friend or friends of friend. Preferably in a red state with good gun laws.
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Sandbags are the best stop. You're still going to have a mess. I'm thinking if not in a basement the Indoor location needs to have cement filled hollow block walls.
Sounds like this could be a liability issue possibly.The only thing better than having all the guns and ammo you'd ever need would be being able to shoot it all off the back porch.
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When we set up the Caswell stuff, there were calculations made for side deflectors, and strafe angles, as well as overhead deflectors. Keep the "errant shot" in mind.
One range I worked with had a downward sloping backstop - not good! Lead built up in the "V" and spit back at the line if not cleaned fequently.
The upward slope plate, with circular chamber was well thought out.
I've shot indoors into newspaper, phone books.... not good. After a brief time, you just drill a hole through. Yes, I repaired both walls, and doors. Not good - please use extreme caution.
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I saw a thread on completed one a while back. As I recall the wooden target box had a couple feet of sand in the bottom and a steel plate at 45* over it. Targets were suspended or mounted on a stand in front of the plate.
That part is straightforward and simple compared to noise and gunpowder smoke. You'll need a high capacity exhaust fan (think restaurant kitchen) and mucho sound proofing.
If all you want is a test barrel for trying loads, use 2 oil drums welded end to end with 3 feet of sand and tilted at an angle you can shoot into. Make sure you have enough sand before shooting really big loads.•"Everything will be okay in the end. If it's not okay, it's not the end." - O. L.
• "America's not at war; her military is. America's at the mall."
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Make a pile of sand 10ft high.
Put it in a box 30x15, back and sides very high, front opening only four feet. like this: [ sandbox ] <--- shoot from this direction
Put angle steel behind it to catch the misses.
At George AFB, in CA the Air Force shot 20mm canons (A10s and F4s mostly) into similar designed piles of open sand, just larger. (We called them revetments or just berms. Revetments without sand where used for engine run-ups)
After few thousand rounds sift it out and re-pile it, wet it down, keep on shooting.All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
USAF (Ret)
NRA Life Member
Conservative
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