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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned
bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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Frogwatch wrote:
In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. A friend of mine learned about bullets bouncing back and geometry all in about a second. There was a bridge that crossed the creek at a sharp angle which created a pocket that was a triangle between the abutment and the bridge. He decided that was a perfect place to put the cans he was shooting at. He lined up the rifle and shot. The bullet left the gun, hit one side of the triangle, then the other side, came right back along the gun barrel, enter his skull just above the eye but below the bone, and passed out through his temple. Fortunately he did not plan it otherwise he would have been dead, since he could not have set up the shot so perfectly. I think it is physically impossible for a bullet to make a 180 when it hits the surface of the water. To make a 180 it would have to hit something like steel or concrete that would reflect the bullet back on its original path. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 11:36:49 -0500, Keith nuttle
wrote: I think it is physically impossible for a bullet to make a 180 when it hits the surface of the water. You are right. A half sperical bowl might do the job. Casady |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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Frogwatch wrote:
In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. Have one of your relatives call us from the ER when you manage to shoot yourself. Here's a hint: make sure the hole in the barrel is pointed away from you. I mention that because you seem to have extraordinary problems with ordinary objects. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Nov 16, 12:40 pm, Boater wrote:
Frogwatch wrote: In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. Have one of your relatives call us from the ER when you manage to shoot yourself. Here's a hint: make sure the hole in the barrel is pointed away from you. I mention that because you seem to have extraordinary problems with ordinary objects. OK. here is how you could get a 180 degree bounce from water. You need a very large breaking wave and I do mean large as the angle for reflection is less than 20 degrees meaning you need 9 reflections from the braking part to get your 180 degrees |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:40 pm, Boater wrote: Frogwatch wrote: In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. Have one of your relatives call us from the ER when you manage to shoot yourself. Here's a hint: make sure the hole in the barrel is pointed away from you. I mention that because you seem to have extraordinary problems with ordinary objects. OK. here is how you could get a 180 degree bounce from water. You need a very large breaking wave and I do mean large as the angle for reflection is less than 20 degrees meaning you need 9 reflections from the braking part to get your 180 degrees You know what? I play around with handguns quite a bit at the range, and before I start shooting, I spend a few minutes thinking over gun safety and looking around to make sure I've done everything possible to minimize the possibility of an accident. You seem to approach life's dangers from an opposite point of view. If it is foolhardy, risky, and it presents a possibility of serious injury or death, you're all for it. You would last maybe five minutes at the outdoor gun range I frequent before the range officer would ban you for life. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 10:00:03 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: On Nov 16, 12:40 pm, Boater wrote: Frogwatch wrote: In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. Have one of your relatives call us from the ER when you manage to shoot yourself. Here's a hint: make sure the hole in the barrel is pointed away from you. I mention that because you seem to have extraordinary problems with ordinary objects. OK. here is how you could get a 180 degree bounce from water. You need a very large breaking wave and I do mean large as the angle for reflection is less than 20 degrees meaning you need 9 reflections from the braking part to get your 180 degrees Much easier to take your copper jacketed. 22 out on the ice and shoot. Neat thing happens - you shoot the ice at a slight angle and the bullet enters the ice and travels a bit until the steam builds up enough - the bullet will come screaming back out of the hole and at pretty decent velocity. :) |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 10:00:03 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: On Nov 16, 12:40 pm, Boater wrote: Frogwatch wrote: In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. Have one of your relatives call us from the ER when you manage to shoot yourself. Here's a hint: make sure the hole in the barrel is pointed away from you. I mention that because you seem to have extraordinary problems with ordinary objects. OK. here is how you could get a 180 degree bounce from water. You need a very large breaking wave and I do mean large as the angle for reflection is less than 20 degrees meaning you need 9 reflections from the braking part to get your 180 degrees Much easier to take your copper jacketed. 22 out on the ice and shoot. Neat thing happens - you shoot the ice at a slight angle and the bullet enters the ice and travels a bit until the steam builds up enough - the bullet will come screaming back out of the hole and at pretty decent velocity. :) I know for a fact a .38 can come back 180 degrees. Not a lot of energy, and bullet was very deformed, only bruised my leg. One year during our annual USAF qualifying, I got said bullet in the leg. Must have hit the metal supports exactly correct. Yes Tom, they did let us handle small arms once a year. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 18:45:39 -0800, "Calif Bill"
wrote: "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 10:00:03 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: On Nov 16, 12:40 pm, Boater wrote: Frogwatch wrote: In my thread about target shooting on the water, someone mentioned bullets bouncing back and had a vid of this happening when a .5 cal bounced from a steel plate. First, some easy to remember physics: Light things do not transfer energy to heavy things well, that is why the bullet bounced back from the steel plate. Heavy things do transfer energy to light things well which is why sand absorbs energy from a bullet so well. Although a bullet will bounce at a shallow angle from water or sand, I doubt it is possible for a 180 degree bounce to happen. OK, it is "possible" but it is probably more likely you will get hit by a meteorite twice. Have one of your relatives call us from the ER when you manage to shoot yourself. Here's a hint: make sure the hole in the barrel is pointed away from you. I mention that because you seem to have extraordinary problems with ordinary objects. OK. here is how you could get a 180 degree bounce from water. You need a very large breaking wave and I do mean large as the angle for reflection is less than 20 degrees meaning you need 9 reflections from the braking part to get your 180 degrees Much easier to take your copper jacketed. 22 out on the ice and shoot. Neat thing happens - you shoot the ice at a slight angle and the bullet enters the ice and travels a bit until the steam builds up enough - the bullet will come screaming back out of the hole and at pretty decent velocity. :) I know for a fact a .38 can come back 180 degrees. Not a lot of energy, and bullet was very deformed, only bruised my leg. One year during our annual USAF qualifying, I got said bullet in the leg. Must have hit the metal supports exactly correct. Yes Tom, they did let us handle small arms once a year. Once a year? Sounds like never would have been a better idea. BBBAAAWWWAAHHHHHAAAAA!!!!! Pansies. :) |
#10
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 20:41:31 GMT, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: Neat thing happens - you shoot the ice at a slight angle and the bullet enters the ice and travels a bit until the steam builds up enough - the bullet will come screaming back out of the hole and at pretty decent velocity. :) I simply do not believe it. Ice is brittle. You might make a shallow but wide trough. otherwise you get a shallow crater. Casady |
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