I don't want to pull this too far off-topic for too long and I'm also not knowledgeable about running commercial shooting ranges. I do know that Athena Gun Club cites OSHA regulations as a reason for not allowing aluminum or steel-cased ammo on their lanes, but I'm not personally aware of any OSHA regs about ranges that deal with anything other than lead and noise pollution. Both the bullet and the primer affect the lead situation, but I have no idea how the type of metal used for the case would...and if aluminum and steel are a problem, why is nickel (almost) never mentioned in range rules? (Dated by a few years, but here's a link to a National Shooting Sports Foundation publication addressing OSHA compliance for indoor ranges.)Soccerdad1995 wrote:Just out of curiosity, is there a valid reason for ranges to ban steel and aluminum cases? I always assumed they were just being greedy and didn't want to sort the casings before they sent them in for cash. Is there an actual safety concern on these as well?
Like you, my 'spicion is that it's mostly (if not all) about selling the reloadable cases. Some smaller ranges may actually sort the leave-behind cases, but my bet is that it isn't efficient for larger ones to do that, and that they contract with recyclers to take the spent cases in bulk. Consistently having a bunch of steel and aluminum in there would probably greatly diminish the monetary return the range gets, or even jeopardize the recycling contract.
We have folks on the Forum who work at/run ranges. Maybe one of them will set us straight.