Outdoor range - quieting baffles ??
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Outdoor range - quieting baffles ??
I am currently living in a rural area that allows the safe discharge of firearms.
My concern is the noise level, especially from .45 target/Hardball ammunition.
Is there a source that provides information on an enclosed shooting position that provides a sound lowering effect?
Someone has suggested using a culvert pipe lined with sound absorbing material. Any thoughts?
TLE
My concern is the noise level, especially from .45 target/Hardball ammunition.
Is there a source that provides information on an enclosed shooting position that provides a sound lowering effect?
Someone has suggested using a culvert pipe lined with sound absorbing material. Any thoughts?
TLE
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- Location: Silver Lake WI
I've seen plans for a baffle system for shooting off a bench from your window in Precision Shooting magazine, but that does not eliminate the noise from a supersonic bullet. Since all of your rounds will be subsonic, a little shelter with rubberized sheeting on the inside might do the trick. You could even have a roof over your head. Maybe a storage shed with the rubberized compound would do the trick. Hope this helps.
Chris
Chris
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- Location: Midland, MI
Noise
Check with the NRA's Range Dept. They can help you
Baffling...
Thanks to all!!
The tires will work, I think. Always wanted to be a Junkyard Dawg... :-)
T
The tires will work, I think. Always wanted to be a Junkyard Dawg... :-)
T
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- Joined: Wed May 05, 2010 8:34 pm
- Location: Texas
This is an old trick that has been successfully used in backyard rifle ranges for decades. However, three comments seem in order:j-team wrote:Shoot through a row of old truck tyres. Stack them together and shoot through the middle of them, each one acts as an expansion chamber.
Downside is that once you set them up it limits you to one shooting position and they make the place look like a junk yard.
1. Their effectiveness is much reduced unless the muzzle is kept well inside the horizontal tire stack.
2. Rifle shooters who may blow large amounts of unburned powder out of their barrels have been known to report that the long-term build-up of said ejecta is highly flammable.
3. In light of #2 and in order to prevent building a mosquito breeding ground, it's advisable to drill a sizable drainage hole at the bottom of each tire.
Just hearsay but sounds mostly reasonable.
A note of encouragement to the OP, though. It's possible to attenuate the sound of almost anything that launches a projectile if you just apply enough ingenuity and money. To wit:
All points worth noting, I suppose that once drain holes are drilled you could hose them out with water periodically to reduce any fire hazard!BenEnglishTX wrote:However, three comments seem in order:
1. Their effectiveness is much reduced unless the muzzle is kept well inside the horizontal tire stack.
2. Rifle shooters who may blow large amounts of unburned powder out of their barrels have been known to report that the long-term build-up of said ejecta is highly flammable.
3. In light of #2 and in order to prevent building a mosquito breeding ground, it's advisable to drill a sizable drainage hole at the bottom of each tire.
Just hearsay but sounds mostly reasonable.