Air gun range question
Moderators: pilkguns, Marcus, m1963
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Air gun range question
Does any one know if this fabric will stop an air gun pellet?
"NOMEX ARAMID KEVLAR CANVAS DUCK FR 8 OZ. 60"W FABRIC"
I was thinking of using it to make a backstop for a range in a room, to catch stray shots
from damaging walls and other items.
"NOMEX ARAMID KEVLAR CANVAS DUCK FR 8 OZ. 60"W FABRIC"
I was thinking of using it to make a backstop for a range in a room, to catch stray shots
from damaging walls and other items.
Re: Air gun range question
I have no knowledge of that product. I would say it would vary by how far behind the targets this is hung and how heavy the product is. I would try maybe 8 foot length of it and shoot into it and see if it stops pellets. They key is that it must hang loose, to absorb the impact. If it is held tight, more likely to penetrate. Try shooting multiple shots into the same spot. If it doesn't penetrate after a few shots, it would be good as a safety screen.
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- Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2010 9:22 pm
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Re: Air gun range question
I may just buy one yard to try it out
Re: Air gun range question
Years ago I had purchased some really heavy synthetic fabric ... Dacron or Rayon or whatever to test this out for a backstop.
Hung it in our range and successfully fired about 4-5 shots into the same spot w/o penetration.
Next morning, demonstrated to shooters and another coach --- and every shot went thru ... in different locations.
The difference .... hint: it was in the winter.
Temp in the range in the afternoon ... about 68-70°F
In the early morning ... before the heaters were on ... about 28°F
Check it in the cold too.....
Hung it in our range and successfully fired about 4-5 shots into the same spot w/o penetration.
Next morning, demonstrated to shooters and another coach --- and every shot went thru ... in different locations.
The difference .... hint: it was in the winter.
Temp in the range in the afternoon ... about 68-70°F
In the early morning ... before the heaters were on ... about 28°F
Check it in the cold too.....
Re: Air gun range question
If you're using this as a safety backstop, and not a primary, it should get hit very rarely, and almost never in the same spot. If you do have penetration, the reduction in kinetic energy may still be acceptable, if not a second barrier a few inches apart from the first should do the trick. As was said earlier, range temp will be a factor.
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- Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2010 9:22 pm
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Re: Air gun range question
Temp should not be a problem, building is kept at 70 - 72 during the day and 55 at night.
I ordered a sheet and will let everyone know the result.
Does anyone know what material Creedmore Sports uses for their backstop.
It is quite pricy, at about $1,400 for 4 points.
I ordered a sheet and will let everyone know the result.
Does anyone know what material Creedmore Sports uses for their backstop.
It is quite pricy, at about $1,400 for 4 points.
Re: Air gun range question
Just a thought. If this is to knock down pellets I wonder if an old auditorium/theater curtain would work? They certainly are heavy any theater/old schools that are closing or are closed would have them.
Chip
Chip
Re: Air gun range question
You might try some old carpeting. It maybe comparably bulkier but at least it's free and it is relatively easy to find replacement material.
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- Posts: 794
- Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2010 9:22 pm
- Location: Cookeville, TN
Re: Air gun range question
I bought a yard of the fabric, it's not light weight
I set it up between poles and fired my air gun at it at 30 feet.
They hit the fabric and just fell to the floor.
None made it threw.
My wife ran a thread on a doubled over edge so a pole can hold it up.
It sews very easily, as Kevlar is not knife proof.
A double layer of this stuff will stop any pellet.
The screen has to be hung loose.
Carpet would be too heavy, in the size I need it,
Plus there is a storage problem.
I set it up between poles and fired my air gun at it at 30 feet.
They hit the fabric and just fell to the floor.
None made it threw.
My wife ran a thread on a doubled over edge so a pole can hold it up.
It sews very easily, as Kevlar is not knife proof.
A double layer of this stuff will stop any pellet.
The screen has to be hung loose.
Carpet would be too heavy, in the size I need it,
Plus there is a storage problem.