Egon
Epic Contributor
Yeah...but not much. Btw, where does lead come from to begin with?![]()
But how little is too much?
Yeah...but not much. Btw, where does lead come from to begin with?![]()
Yeah...but not much. Btw, where does lead come from to begin with?![]()
Is it the bullet or the explosion that clears the screen?
Has to be the bullet...sand points are used 25' or so down and the "shooting" is through a pretty big pipe. No way I can see where the concussion alone would clear the sediment with something as tiny as a .22 round. As for lead poisoning, if that little piece of lead perhaps eroding over a long period of time (diluted with all the water that will bring it up to your faucet, most of which will end up in your septic system with dish washing etc.), I believe non-lead .22 ammo is available.
Its an enclosed space so the energy cant dissipate outward like it can in a more open container.Now, I'm really perplexed. When the lab technicians want to catch a bullet on crime shows, they fire it into what seems like only a few feet of water. I'd have guessed that a bullet would have lost all of it's wallop by the time it got to the sand point.
Does the shock of the bullet striking the water dislodge the iron or does the bullet hitting the screen clear it or punch a hole in it?Its an enclosed space so the energy cant dissipate outward like it can in a more open container.
Aaron Z
Its an enclosed space so the energy cant dissipate outward like it can in a more open container.
Aaron Z
Does the shock of the bullet striking the water dislodge the iron or does the bullet hitting the screen clear it or punch a hole in it?