The present invention relates to an apparatus for installation at shooting ranges and has a non-flowable granulate material that is used as a stopping material for projectiles.
Most bullets and other projectiles are fully or partly made of lead or other contaminating materials. This leads to an environmental problem at shooting ranges when the bullets are captured by sandbanks and other inclined surfaces positioned behind the targets. Large amounts of lead and lead compounds leach into the ground in an uncontrolled manner. There is a need for an apparatus that effectively and safely captures lead and other bullets without polluting the environment.
The present invention provides a solution to the above-outlined problems. More particularly, the apparatus of the present invention is for installation at shooting ranges. The apparatus has a housing that has a resilient top layer and a flexible bottom layer. The layer extends along an inclined bottom surface and over an upwardly protruding support member to a front side. The top layer is attached to the bottom layer at the front side to form a container. A non-flowable granulate material is packed in the container. The inclined bottom surface is inclined at an angle relative to a horizontal plane. The angle is less than an angle of repose of the granulated material.
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An important feature of the present invention is that the granulated material 16 may be tightly packed in the housing 12. The granulated material 16 may include a stationary non-flowable rubber material that is tightly enclosed in the housing 12 to prevent lead pollution from lead bullets and other projectiles 22. Because the rubber material 16 is non-flowable, the rubber material 16 retains the projectiles 22 that penetrate into the rubber material 16 and the projectiles 22 may adhere to and become part of the rubber material 16 since the rubber material 16 is not free-flowable and the sloping angle of the support surface is below the angle of repose of the granulate material 16.
The housing 12 has a resilient top layer 24 and a bendable bottom rubber layer 26. The top layer 24 may extend across the entire housing 12 and be made of a material that permits the penetration of the projectiles 22 while preventing any granulate material 16 from escaping the housing 12.
The bottom layer 26 rests on the inclined bottom surface 28 and extends up over a supporting segment 30 and over an upside down U-shaped member 32. The supporting segment 30 car be any supporting member or wall made of wood, sand, stone, bags or any other suitable supporting material. Preferably, the bottom layer 26 is watertight but it does not have to be as long as the layer 26 separates the granulated material 16 from the ground or support surface. The layer 26 and the top layer 24 may together be tightly attached to a front side 34 of the member 32 with a fastener 35 that may extend along the entire width W of the housing 12. In this way, the layer 24 and the layer 26 may form watertight container 25. A gap 46 may be formed between the layer 26 and the supporting segment 30. The gap may be defined by a polyethylene member that supports the granulate material.
Adjacent to a corner 44 between the bottom surface 28 and the segment 30 is a drainage pipe 36 located. The pipe 36, that may extend along the entire width W of the housing 12, is, at one end of the pipe, in fluid communication with an outlet tube 38 that has a lid 41. The lid 41 may be opened for withdrawing or pumping any water and pollutants that may have gathered in the drainage pipe 36. It may also be possible to associate the pipe 36 to an outlet for a safe and automatic drainage of the pollutants.
A vertical steel tube 39 that has a plastic skin 40 extends from a concrete slab 42 into the U-shaped member 32 and provides support for the members 30, 32. The slab 42 may extend along an entire width W of the housing 12 and the slap 42 supports a plurality of tubes 39 that are spaced apart about 120 centimeters from one another. The U-shaped member 32 may also extend along the entire width W of the housing 12. Instead of using concrete slab, it is possible to use anchors or any other suitable technology.
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The extended layer 27 prevents the leaching of lead and other contaminants in the previously contaminated ground segment 122. In other words, the extended layer 27 prevents water 123 in the region 120 from entering into the ground segment 122 that can create further contamination of the lead bullets 125 that may already exist in the ground segment 122. Another function of the layer 27 is to prevent the leaching of lead from the region 120 into the ground segment 122.
The bottom layer 26 may be attached to the support members 96 by a suitable elongate member 124 so that the top layer 24 and the bottom layer 26 form a tight seal.
In general, the granulated stopping material preferably consists of particulate solids with suitable properties to stop incoming projectiles without creating lead-dust. Such materials can preferably be elastomeric materials designed into shapes of granules, powder or a gradation with both components or consisting of other materials with similar properties.
The granulated stopping material may be placed on a surface of high friction against the stopping-material and/or supplied with conformities over or under this surface to hold the granulated stopping material in place to prevent it from sliding down. This angle of slide may be kept smaller than the angle of repose of the stopping-material itself to prevent the material from moving downwardly at impact. The cover that covers the stopping material supports the stopping-material to stay in place through additional weight.
A supporting construction can be of any shape and made from any construction material that has enough capability to hold the weight of the box in the desired angle, and will become the same sliding angle as the bottom surface. In case of using a sand slope as the supporting construction, the angle of repose of the sand may be the limit of which suitable angle may be used since the angle of repose of sand is relatively low.
In case of using a separate bottom layer, the supporting construction does not have to be a uniform surface but can be made of supporting round beams spaced with partially open distances. The bottom layer may rest on the round beams as hanging carpets supporting the stopping material or resting or a rough surface like a natural dirt segment or an old range-segment of sand. Optionally, the bottom layer may be watertight but that is not necessary. In case of outdoor use, the bottom layer may also be sealed trough heat or chemical bonding or mechanically tightening together with the top layer. The top layer may be fastened to the supporting frame or held in place by shoveling dirt over the edges. The bottom layer that may be disposed outside the frame may be held in place by the material that can be shot at, and a layer that is heavy enough to hold it down without permitting projectiles passing the bottom layer.
The principle is to let the contaminated sand stay under the bottom layer under conditions that the bottom layer which in this case is watertight will stop further contamination as water will not enter and thus cannot leach out lead from the sand that is disposed underneath.
The bottom layer should be connected watertight at the highest level to a wall, or the layer should be enlarged to cover the area to the beginning of the slope at the backside for the surface water to stream freely on the backside or the layer to be connected to a drain trough an open ditch or via a drainpipe.
When using a sealed construction one of the benefits is that moisture, condensation and lead that may pollute the water is directed to enter the drainage system and be safely collected there without creating any environmental damage.
The box-type catcher with lid may be used with fire-protective agents in a floating form as this can be circulated through the drainage pipe and may be uniformly spread without external mixing. Because of oxygen having access to the space under the lid, it is important to have a fire protection when shooting with tracers. The same can be adapted to the sealed sloping version with drainage if extra protection is desired. The frames of recycled polyethylene plastic or rubber material are free from ricochets.
While the present invention has been described in accordance with preferred compositions and embodiments, it is to be understood that certain substitutions and alterations may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the following claims.
This application is a U.S. national phase application based on International Application No. PCT/SE2003/002096, filed 29 Dec. 2003, claiming priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/319,882, filed 20 Jan. 2003.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE03/02096 | 12/29/2003 | WO | 00 | 7/14/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/065887 | 8/5/2004 | WO | A |
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2242730 | Oct 1991 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060131813 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60319882 | Jan 2003 | US |