Relax wrote:darrell wrote:Have you ever watched the show "Mythbusters"? they have done several episodes on ricochets. And yes, ricochets can both travel more than 5 feet and bounce at more than a 95 degree angle.
Yea it was Vince not you sorry.
I'll go with my own tests thank you very much, not some BS hogwash on TV. Or, you can look up video's on youtube where real people actually place real armor plate etc and then check splatter patterns even upwards of .50cal bullets. Or you could just get your butt to a shooting range and look at the splash patterns from bullets after they have struck the steel targets. It is rather obvious how far the "splatter" goes. As the ground will literally have the outline of said lead bullets spray pattern on it.
The only ricochets that ever happen which could be dangerous to your life are those behind the point of impact. Under no circumstances is anyone in danger in front of the point of impact unless you are literally standing directly beside the point of impact.
A shooting range need not be a large volume. It could be no larger than a square meter by whatever length one wishes. And oh, by the way, only rarely do people shoot to "stay in shape". Like once or twice a week. Not everyday.
At an US Army combat pistol range, where the Pistol, Semiautomatic, 9mm, M9 was being fired with the 9×19mm Parabellum full metal jacket ball round,
I have PERSONALLY WITNESSED where a projectile bounced back all the way to the firing line, striking the ground at the firer's feet. The projectile was still hot from being fired.
If that projectile had bounced back at just slightly higher above the ground, it could have hit the firer or firer's safety
in the face or IN AN EYE, potentially
disfiguring, seriously injuring, blinding or
even KILLING the firer or firer's safety.
Prior to that incident, I enforceed the US Army's policy of wearing a helmet, body armor, ballistic lens eye protection, and hearing protection at ranges because it was the Army's policy and it was my job as an NCO to carry out the policies of the Army. After that incident, I
understood (on a real and very personal basis) why the Army had adopted that policy (not just the idea of training the way you will fight) and
completely supported the Army's policy of wearing a helmet, body armor, ballistic lens eye protection, and hearing protection at any zeroing, practice or qualification range directly being controlled and run by US Army personnel where US Army personnel would fire live ammunition.
Some background information on the pistol range. The point of view is from the initial firing line (firers initially engaged targets from this point, before moving forward down a straight path perpendicular to the initial firing line to continue to engage targets):
Plastic pop-up targets behind earthen berms, at a minimum range of 10 meters and a maximum range of 25 meters from the initial firing line, positioned to the left and right of the path the firers would move forward on. No target was directly in front of a firer at any time, but forward of and slightly to the right or left of a firer. (While the pop-up targets were positioned parallel to the initial firing line, the firer would never be shooting perpendicular (90 degrees) to any target. Instead the firer would be shooting at a angle of less than 90 degrees to the target.)
The top of the target pits behind the berm were topped by a single large horizontal beam, approximately the size of a heavy wooden railroad tie. These beams were exposed to the firers, due to the earth just in front of it being eroded away from the many projectiles fired in the past that missed the target low, striking the top of the berms in front of the target pits and tearing away the earth that had previously shielded the beams from impacts. I suspect that
the projectile that bounced back to the initial firing line first struck and ricocheted off of one of these beams, another firer having missed their target low.
A high, thick earthen berm backstop placed behind the most distant target at a minimum distance of 35 meters from the initial firing line.
The range firing lane safeties (one for each firing lane) were positioned
immediately behind and slightly to the non-firing hand side of the firer so that they could look over their shoulder, without interfering with the firer as they drew, aimed, fired and reloaded--as the firer first engaged the targets that popped up, and then followed the firer moving forward down the path to engage the the targets at closer range when instructed by the tower range safety.
I was one of the range firing lane safeties (wearing helmet, body armor, ballistic eye lens protection, and hearing protection just as the firers were) when I
personally witnessed one of the projectiles bouncing back to the feet of the firer I was just behind. And this happened
when the firers were at the farthest point from anything (in the direction of fire)
that could produce a ricochet or bouncer.----------------------------------------------------------------
On a different note, I echo darrell's reply that you incorrectly attributed his quote. You quoted darrell as saying what I (Vince) had posted, and quoted me (Vince) as saying what darrell had posted. In the future, please be more careful when quoting another person's post so that the correct person is accurately credited for what they posted.