[size=x-large]Rifle Range - Read before watching clip[/size]
This is a good example of not really knowing or understanding what the hell can happen when you shoot at metal plates.
Turn your sound up..........so you can hear the bullet head back.
This guy is shooting a 50 cal rifle. Watch the dust when he fires. The target is a steel plate, 1000 yards (.57 miles, 10 foot ball fields) away.
You can hear the ping of the hit and then hear the bullet coming back. It hits the ground just in front of him, then bounces up, hits the earmuffs, knocking them from his head.
The footage is amazing. If you haven't heard a ricochet before, you can hear the bullet as it tumbles through the air on its course back toward the shooter.
Consider the probability the bullet hitting the ground in exactly the right place to bounce up at the correct trajectory angle to hit his ear protection, not over, or under them.
Fortunately the tumble, or the angle of the plate he was shooting at changed the return course of the bullet by 6 inches "left" over half a mile's worth of travel distance (right eye dominant sighting - left ear-cup impact).
Otherwise it would have been a "return one hop head shot", instead of an earphone shot.
The .50 caliber sniper rifle is an impressive piece of gear! Wearing "Depends" when firing one is helpful to this shooter.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ABGIJwiGBc
This is a good example of not really knowing or understanding what the hell can happen when you shoot at metal plates.
Turn your sound up..........so you can hear the bullet head back.
This guy is shooting a 50 cal rifle. Watch the dust when he fires. The target is a steel plate, 1000 yards (.57 miles, 10 foot ball fields) away.
You can hear the ping of the hit and then hear the bullet coming back. It hits the ground just in front of him, then bounces up, hits the earmuffs, knocking them from his head.
The footage is amazing. If you haven't heard a ricochet before, you can hear the bullet as it tumbles through the air on its course back toward the shooter.
Consider the probability the bullet hitting the ground in exactly the right place to bounce up at the correct trajectory angle to hit his ear protection, not over, or under them.
Fortunately the tumble, or the angle of the plate he was shooting at changed the return course of the bullet by 6 inches "left" over half a mile's worth of travel distance (right eye dominant sighting - left ear-cup impact).
Otherwise it would have been a "return one hop head shot", instead of an earphone shot.
The .50 caliber sniper rifle is an impressive piece of gear! Wearing "Depends" when firing one is helpful to this shooter.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ABGIJwiGBc