Is it safe to shoot hard objects down range?

dakota.potts

New member
I see people talking about shooting objects like cans and I'm wondering if it's safe in terms of fragmentation. I know we shoot at steel targets but they're thicker and designed not to fragment as far as I can tell. For something like a tin can this might not be the case.

I had a thought that gluing some pennies to a white sheet of paper might make for a target that I could easily see hits on but I'm not sure if fragmenting or ricochets would be a danger. I may just take some plastic bottle caps failing that but before I shoot at anything other than a paper or steel target wanted to find out what the wisdom here was.
 
Most bullets should glide right through cans and into your backstop. Pennies will likely fly but not sure how much energy would be retained in them.
 
What kind of gun/bullets will you be using?
Know your backstop. What ranges are you talking about?
Really....pennies? What is the point of that?
Hypothetical question.
There are frangible bullets. I loaded them for a .243 as a dog/coyote round when I had cattle. Hit anything and they went to safe tiny pieces.
That would be kind of expensive shooting to destroy pennies, though.
 
Pennies were just kind of a hypothetical. Here I've heard soup cans, computer hard drives (not to call anyone out) that kind of thing and I always thought that sounded kind of unsafe.
 
I wouldn't worry about shooting things like you have listed above.
I shoot old Galv. Steel garbage cans, 55 gallon drums etc all the time. I have never had a FMJ round go "rogue", always an equal number of entry and exit wounds so to speak.

Keep in mind almost everything you have listed are a very soft metal, like Aluminum and copper. If you were shooting 1/2 steel plates or old cars I might be more worried.


PS: Coins are no match for rifle rounds either

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Rule of thumb: hard objects that will shatter if you hit them (sorry, when you hit them ;)) don't make good targets. So, no glass, hard drives, or other things made from hard, breakable materials. Hard objects made of thin materials that will just end up with bullet holes in them, like cans, are fine. Hard objects like steel plates, rocks, etc. -- anything with ricochet potential -- are OK only at safe distances.

Other hard-things-that-shatter that are fine to use for targets are small, crisp, edibles such as animal crackers -- those are fun, and clean-up isn't really an issue. Bigger things, like melons, are fine from a safety standpoint, but are hard to clean up -- if you use them, be considerate about where you put them.
 
I'd never thought of something like animal crackers. I'm trying to figure out a small target that would be very obvious when I hit it as I have a hard time seeing my hits on paper.

That or I could just get a spotter scope...
 
Animal crackers have been mentioned so I will add Ritz crackers and vanilla wafers. Slightly larger target than the typical animal cracker...and they make a more delicious snack IMO. :D
 
I'm trying to figure out a small target that would be very obvious when I hit it as I have a hard time seeing my hits on paper.

Seems like for that, the easiest thing would be to buy some shoot-n-c style targets. Alternately, you could just stick little pieces of aluminum foil to your targets with some spray adhesive.
 
I have used spent 12 ga. shotshells on occasion as well as the bright orange clay pigeons. Problem with that is you only get one hit per target and the cost adds up for the pigeons but you will definitely know when you hit it.

I have also used the shoot-n-c targets mentioned earlier. Depending on the size you choose and the distance you are shooting, you may still need a spotting scope to know for sure where you hit.
 
Heh.

My dad, as a kid, shot a perfect bullseye, dead center, through a penny testing a .22 rifle he wanted to by. The penny, lodged in a fence pole, flicked back and hit him; he carried it on his keychain 'til the day he died.

Old toilets are fun, but dangerous at close ranges - I had a spent .32 round bounce off my chest, thanks be to God. Huge Sangria jugs full of water are also a dubious exercise, although my son still thanks me for that experience. While visually stimulating, huge shards of glass will fly past your head!

Damn, that was fun, though! :D
 
Way back in the day, I shot on the rifle team at high school. After classes, we'd rush to the range before the coach could get there and stick DumDum lollipops in the sand and hang Lifesavers on the screws extending from the target holders. Along the ledge of the sand trap we lined up JuJuBees. A lot more fun to shoot at than paper targets.
 
About 3/4 mile from the place we lived in WV was the killer sign post. A young hunter came up missing and the search party found him dead near a sign post.

The post had a Forest Service sign on it. That post has a u shaped channell. The hunter fired at the sign, the bullet went through the sign and hit the post, changed directions, came out of the sign and killed the hunter. The gun was a .22 magnum.
 
Metal target frames can bounce a bullet back into the shooter. Happened at Fort Polk in 1976.

One of the neatest reactive targets I ever shot was a can of recalled foamy shaving cream. A friend was a rep for a company who recalled a bunch of the stuff. He ended up with a couple of cases which needed disposal.

It was great fun seeing the cans launch leaving a trail of white through the air.

Of course this was before EPA regs basically outlawed this practice.
 
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