I use a discarded Hoffman elec. enclosure 24" x 30" x 12" deep. I found this thingy with wheels, mounted it. The van at work removed the floor liner that is thick hardish foam stuff and BAM....
carry on...
carry on...
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Funny, the rubber mulch I got from Home Depot sinks.I use postal boxes filled with rubber mulch in the garage.
As the box gets shot up I wrap several layers of duct tape around the box and keep shooting.
I shoot both sides.
When the box gets too heavy with pellets, I dump the whole lot into my clean 5 gallon shop vac and fill with water.
The lead sinks to the bottom and the rubber floats to the top and can be skimmed off.
The lead is accumulated and is then melted and cast into ingots that I save for future use as to cast bullets for the .54 Renegade or .44 Ruger Old Army Revolver.
Get another box from the PO and fill with the reclaimed rubber mulch.
My mulch is about 13 years old and works fine.
I just built a "storage container / rubber mulch " target , Quiet . contains lead , no splash i can detect . I tape a cardboard piece to the inside of the cover so i can just lay the box down take the cover off and replace the cardboard , no leaks .Because I live in Wisconsin and am "trapped" all winter indoors, I shoot in my basement using a steel 22 cal rimfire bullet trap. While it is effective in containing anything from .177 to .30 cal pellets, it spits out lead particles up to 3 or 4 feet around it. I shoot a lot and am concerned about cleaning up this mess. I've watched videos of homemade traps using wood, cardboard, or plastic boxes with rubber mulch and/or duct seal to absorb the projectiles. How many pellets will these contain before you have to either clean them or scrap them? Do they spit out lead particles or dust? Your experience is helpful.
This one looks exactly like the one i built . works great .I use a small storage box with lid from Lowe’s filled with rubber mulch. I cut a rectangular hole in the lid about two inches in from the edges. I cut a piece of cardboard that is a slight press fit in the container to sort of hold the mulch in place. Then I put the lid on the bottom portion. I put another slight press fit piece of cardboard into the lid from the outside that the target gets taped to. I also have a piece of cardboard that I lay on the outer cardboard that has a rectangle cut in it. I just lay that on the outer cardboard and trace a rectangle with a pen or Sharpie onto the cardboard to identify where the cutout is in the plastic lid, that way I center the target over that rectangle so I don’t shoot into the plastic lid…hopefully. I stand the thing up on the narrow end and gravity keeps the mulch in place and the inner layer of cardboard (under the lid) keeps the mulch in place until pellets start cutting a big hole. I replace the cardboards as necessary to keep mulch from coming out.
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Mike, I’ve since switched on the type of backing to keep the mulch secured from spilling out. At first it was the bird scene hardware cloth, then I used rolled aluminum flashing, and both just created a mess of sharp shrapnel bits. So now I use 2” thick neoprene padding from the Hvac shop I used to work for. I cut a piece 1/4” wider and taller than the opening and wedge it inside. It holds the mulch in very well, is very silent, can be left outdoors, and doesn’t disintegrate like a cardboard would. Last summer I probably shot 5,000 pellets into it and it held up wellNice design Auggie
how often do you need to replace the screen?