Do you know of any 'modern' INDOOR range that has lumber anywhere near where bullets go? Pretty archaic. Shredded rubber backstops (the most cost-effective) cannot be damaged by hollow-point bullets. Neither can total-containment or even ancient smash-plate backstops. Target carriers are pretty much armored as well. (With exception of the type that use exposed cabling, which would be just as vulnerable to FMJ. But fires are ALWAYS a concern.WildBill wrote:I think indoor ranges are more concerned about damage to the backstop rather than fires. JHP tear up target stands and lumber more than FMJ.sjfcontrol wrote:I think they would like to avoid steel-core bullets because they can cause sparks.barstoolguru wrote:From what I hear they ban steel bullets and bullets with steel inserts because it damages the backstop but I never heard of them banning JHP
REMEMBER -- Only YOU can prevent gun-range fires! -- Smokey Bear
I was at an outdoor range once when a fire started on the 100 yard line. I don't know if it was steel core or tracer or ? By the time we could get a cease fire and sprint to the targets we had a 10-15 ft diameter grass fire.
I don't know what would cause a spark on an outdoor range unless a round hit a rock or something (assuming no tracers). With indoor ranges you can get a pretty good spark by bouncing a steel-core bullet off the concrete floor. Combine the spark with green powder (possible maintenance problem), and paper chaff from shot-up targets and you have a pretty good starter. Throw in the rubber from the backstop (even treated) and you could lose the building.