I like suggestions on material to catch (without damaging) my .22lr rounds for examination.
Years ago I used a type of wet mulch which worked extremely well, showing no deformation to the nose or rifling marks, sadly I no longer have access to it.
Thanks,
warren
Warren, Years back ,Merrill Martin used ordinary shop sweep from his company machine shop. Made a 2x2 plywood box 10 ft long and filled same with shop sweep. Used a metal plate at the end for hi power rounds but none ever left the box. Used a metal detecter over the open box and found the unmarked bullet. Hope this helps. Cheers
I like suggestions on material to catch (without damaging) my .22lr rounds for examination.
Years ago I used a type of wet mulch which worked extremely well, showing no deformation to the nose or rifling marks, sadly I no longer have access to it.
Thanks,
warren
I like suggestions on material to catch (without damaging) my .22lr rounds for examination.
Years ago I used a type of wet mulch which worked extremely well, showing no deformation to the nose or rifling marks, sadly I no longer have access to it.
Thanks,
warren
I've never seen any real deformation firing into water - but I wasn't trying to use hyper-velocity stuff either. I was just shooting into a shallow creek with a mud bottom. Most bullets didn't even penetrate the mud. The creek was only about a foot deep. Creek bank was about 4 foot above the water and I was shooting down at steeper than 45°, so never had a problem with ricochet either.
David
As I remember it, I'd say yes. I could easily make out the rifling grooves. As well as the individual striations in each groove. At one point I tried mounting a rifled barrel extension - going from a 6 groove bbl to a 16 groove Microgroove, and could clearly see the superposition on the bullet. They did not mushroom, (at least not to my untrained eye 20+ years ago) but then again they were subsonic rounds as well. I didn't put a micrometer to them to see if there was some plumping due to the impact with the water. While that wouldn't surprise me much if there was, it wasn't enough to detect without instruments.David,
I keep thinking of “Belly Busters” as a youngster when thinking of the resistance of water to the human body and I guess I’ve always thought that much deceleration would deform the bullet or wipe out the finer details we’d like to see of the rifling.
Were the bullets you recovered pristine?
Landy
I've been waiting for the guy in Colorado to tell us he catches them in his teeth.
Landy, I sure enjoyed your post number 15. I watch for your writings and always find them informative and interesting.
Gene Beggs