Ricochets....:oops:

There is a wee video of a chap firing a .50 cal which comes back at him and takes his ear defenders off.
I am not IT savvy enough to post it on SD - perhaps someone else will be kind enough to do so.

Whilst on the subject (forgive the repost).
I once had a patient who had been shot in the chest - the bullet came to rest at the back of one of his heels.




This one
 
I was out last season, sitting in a seat overlooking a field in a valley with a woodland margin with the 243. About 70 yards away a group of fallow appear all moving in the same direction, making their way across the field right to left. All were broadside and I selected a doe near the back of the group and completely clear I pulled the trigger on a heart/lung shot. She dropped like a stone but strangely another doe that had been 10 yards following behind in the line started spinning round frantically finally falling to the floor. Slightly confused I got down from the seat immediately to investigate finding the second animal wheezing heavily. I dispatched with a headshot.

On inspection in the larder, the first shot had been spot on, entering behind the front leg, wiping out the vitals, but then richocetting off the opposite leg and exiting at 75 degrees carrying enough energy to wind the second animal frontal some distance behind.

The shot was as safe as houses, but opened my eyes to what strange things can happen regardless of what calibre is in your hands.
The same happened to me some years ago . I spotted two Roe does on a bank, but they were too close together for a safe shot at either. I waited until they separated by a few yards so that from my position they were well separated . I shot the left hand one and to my surprise the second doe on the right collapsed as well. The bullet (.308) had exited at a right angle.
As many contributors have said there is no such thing as a 100% safe backstop despite some of the holier than thou contributors postings!
 
As many contributors have said there is no such thing as a 100% safe backstop despite some of the holier than thou contributors postings!

Completely agree. And, knowing that fact makes people safer shooters. As soon as a fellow starts talking in absolutes, he ceases to think. He suspends judgment. He stops doing those subconscious mini risk-assessments that all of us perform before squeezing the trigger. Those people really worry me and shouldn't be out shooting unsupervised.
 
What is the likelihood of a bullet ricochet off a rabbit scaling a hill that’s behind a rabbit?
How far behind the rabbit? A few yards or a few miles? How high is the hill? A few yards or a few hundred feet? If you're relying on high hills in the distant landscape to contain your wayward shots then I would say you are not a safe shooter. All sorts of things could be happening over there, unbeknownst to you.
On the other hand, a modest sized hill or rising ground immediately beyond your target is ideal. Even so, some bullets will defy logic. Thankfully, ricochets generally lose velocity very quickly.
 
Completely agree. And, knowing that fact makes people safer shooters. As soon as a fellow starts talking in absolutes, he ceases to think. He suspends judgment. He stops doing those subconscious mini risk-assessments that all of us perform before squeezing the trigger. Those people really worry me and shouldn't be out shooting unsupervised.

Totally this. Richochets happens with air rifle, rimfires and CF's. Anyone who shoots enough knows this having experienced all despite shooting with what appears to be a safe backstop beyond their point of aim.

It is why I always turn down a particular shot on our land where I am frequently presented with rabbits, deer, fox etc. The shooting position is from a flattish piece of ground and the potential targets tend to sit at the crease of land where it rises aggressively upwards a good way, about 70 metres and at an angle approaching 45 degrees. Most would tend to look at it and think "yep, the bullet is going to penetrate and go on to hit a massive bank of the earth's crust and all will be well." And in all probability all probably will be well. The key is the word "probably" About 800yds beyond that hill is the next village where a richochet, however unlikely, would have a good chance of impacting badly on life or property. I simply do not take this shot ever. I always curse as I turn it down but in the back of my mind I am thinking "if I take that shot, it could be the one in a 1000 time something behaves randomly"

I have had ricochet with .222rem shooting downhill at 45degrees in to sodden pasture with the target being a cardboard box. I was amazed. Bullet sized entry and exit and had then hit the ground and somehow gone awol. You simply cannot with 100% certainty say a shot is absolutely safe unless your backstop is a vertical bank of soft soil/sand with no foreign body in it.

I once shot a muntjac with .243 at the bottom of a backdrop of huge bank of hill covered in gorse. Atop the incline was a row of fencing. Bullet went through the animal and somehow turned upwards at an angle well in excess of 45degrees and went through one of the fence posts ha ha. Brother in law was well hacked off ha ha ha. I was just happy there was a desolate landscape beyond. I would never ever consider turning down that shot. If it was considered unsafe, you would simply have to give up all forms of shooting.

Be safe, mitigate against danger by being careful but also by being realistic.
 
Completely agree. And, knowing that fact makes people safer shooters. As soon as a fellow starts talking in absolutes, he ceases to think. He suspends judgment. He stops doing those subconscious mini risk-assessments that all of us perform before squeezing the trigger. Those people really worry me and shouldn't be out shooting unsupervised.


This is why I prefer fast frangible bullets for pretty everything other than deer, for an added layer of safety, yet whenever I post that on here I get accused of being an unsafe shot!! I suspect by people who do far less shooting than I do!

Have had a 75 gr Varmint bullet ricochet from a steep grasses bank after going through 12” of heavily muscled animal before, after it failed to expand so even that’s not a fail safe!
 
It’s quite clear to me from this thread there are SD members who shouldn’t be granted an FAC for anything other than use at a club range and under the strictest of supervision.

K
 
Did they have a big back stop behind them? If you have a piece of ground behind an rabbit that covers its body and it going upwards then a bullet is not going to hit the rabbit and fly over the top of the hill or come out at 90 degrees. A bullet in theory will only bounce as high as the height you are shooting from so if the rabbit is in front of the ground you are shooting it it from there’s bugger all place for it to go.

So according to your theory your bullets our powered by gravity to not go higher than the height they are fired from!

One of the most ludicrous things I have ever seen written on this forum
 
I still can’t see a bullet ricocheting past a decent back drop
I think the point is that they'll go wherever they are sent by whatever it is that causes the ricochet and one has no control of where that might be. A backstop might mitigate the risks but it will not exclude them as the direction of travel will not necessarily be towards the backstop.
 
So according to your theory your bullets our powered by gravity to not go higher than the height they are fired from!

One of the most ludicrous things I have ever seen written on this forum
Whitester said:
That's what I've read, not actually done a practical.
To be fair, a bullet in normal flight will never rise above the line along which it is fired. Due to gravity it is gradually falling from the moment it leaves the barrel. That is why we shoot on an inclined plane. Bullets do not mysteriously "rise" above the line of sight to give the classic trajectory curve, they get there because we shoot them slightly upwards relative to the line of sight.
However, ricochets are not normal flight, and often involve deformed bullets. Their flight cannot be predicted, except under test situations involving know angles of impact against hard level surfaces.
 
To be fair, a bullet in normal flight will never rise above the line along which it is fired. Due to gravity it is gradually falling from the moment it leaves the barrel. That is why we shoot on an inclined plane. Bullets do not mysteriously "rise" above the line of sight to give the classic trajectory curve, they get there because we shoot them slightly upwards relative to the line of sight.
However, ricochets are not normal flight, and often involve deformed bullets. Their flight cannot be predicted, except under test situations involving know angles of impact against hard level surfaces.
Whitester was talking about bullets after they had ricocheted, or bounced, and they most certainly can bounce higher
 
Backstop
Backstop
Backstop

If your Ricochet bullet collides with a member of the public, none of the arguments put forward on this discussion would provide a defence.

if you are not certain over where bullet will end up do not squeeze that trigger.
 
Back
Top