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Ballistic Gelatin
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one of us
posted
Anyone know of a recipe for ballistic gelatin? Is it hard to work with or is something easier?
 
Posts: 117 | Location: Newark, Oh, USA | Registered: 14 April 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
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The target material is prepared from gelatin, USP. The government
laboratories purchase this as Pharmagel A, Type 250 from the Kind &
Knox Co., Park 80 West, Plaza 2, Saddle Brook, NJ 07662. The last
time I bought any was in 1984, and at that time the price was
$2.40/lb., or about $600 for a 55 gal. drum, shipped F.O.B. from
Sioux City, IA.

The powder is mixed 10 percent by weight in warm, but not boiling
water until dissolved, and then poured into moulds and chilled in a
large refrigerator. The standard block size is 15x15x30cm for handgun
bullets and 20x20x50cm for rifle bullets, but improvised moulds such
as from cal. .50 M2A1 ammunition cans work well.

You will also need Thymol or cinnamon oil as a clarifier, which is
added in the proportion of 1 drop per liter. You will also need heavy
duty electric stirrers or an industrial mixer, moulds, a release
agent, such as Pam cooking spray for releasing the castings, LD
plastic film or Saran wrap for wrapping the blocks, a freezer for
storage if you will not use the blocks within a week, and foam coolers
to transport them to the range, if you do not have a walk-in cooler
near your lab.

To do this right, establish the tare weight of a 5 gallon stainless
steel container in which you will heat the water and mix the gelatin.
Ideally this should have a spigot on the bottom to aid decanting the
dissolved gelatin into the moulds. Add 12 liters of water to the
container and bring the temperature to 65 degs. C and adjust the
weight by adding or deleting water to obtain 12,000 grams. Place two
electric stirrers into the hot water, one near the top and the other
near the bottom of the container. Add three grams of Thymol or 12
drops of cinnamon oil and stir until dissolved in the hot water. Add
1500 grams of Pharmagel A to the hot water, breaking up any lumps with
a stainless steel rod or paddle, to supplement the stirrers, as
necessary.

After the gelatin is dissolved, in 10-15 minutes, turn off the
stirrers and remove them from the solution. Allow the bubbles and
foam to rise to the surface for 20 minutes. If the container used
does not have a spigot at the bottom, it is necessary to skim the foam
off the surface before transferring the solution to the moulds. Allow
the warm gelatin to stand at room temperature for at least one hour
after transferring, so additional foam which rises to the top may be
removed.

Place the gelatin in a refrigerator overnight at 0-5 degs. C. The
gelatin may then be removed from the moulds by placing the container
in hot water. After 15-20 seconds use a spatula to loosen the gelatin
from the sides of the container. After two minutes remove the mould
from the hot water and invert it over a piece of plastic film spread
on a flat surface.

Once the gelatin is removed from the mould it should be allowed to
remain at room temperature for one hour, then tightly sealed in
plastic film and the wrapped block inserted into a plastic bag, which
is again sealed to prevent evaporation, which drastically changes the
consistency of the gelatin. Once tightly wrapped, the blocks can be
stored up to six months in a freezer, or up to one week in a
refrigerator. Unused blocks should be frozen immediately to retard
mold growth. Before firing the blocks must be allowed to thaw and
stabilized overnight at a temperature of 5-10 degs. C, because proper
consistency is a function of the tempoerature.

Evaluation of the blocks is best accomplished by flash X-ray
photography which permits measurement of transient cavity volume as a
function of projectile striking velocity, time, distance penetrated
and projectile exit velocity energy deposit). If high speed
photographic equipment is not available, it is useful to use a small
caliber calibration test shot, such as a steel .177 air rifle shot
from a Daisy pump-up air rifle known to give consistent performance,
which can be placed as a consistency calibration check in a corner of
the block out of the way. The permanent cavity can then be made to
stand out well for still photography by injecting a colored water
solution of ten drops food dye to a liter of water, using as
veterinary syringe or laboratory wash bottle to reach all corners of
the permanent cavity. To provide proper scale for the photograph, a
piece of graph paper can be photocopied onto overhead transparency
film, and used as a template to be positioned over the shot. The block
should then be placed on a light table or photographed using diffused,
backlit strobe flash. Detailed ammunition test methodology is
available in various open-source medical and technical references.

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http://stevespages.com/page8.htm

 
Posts: 3282 | Location: Saint Marie, Montana | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
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Piece of cake!
 
Posts: 487 | Location: Central Texas | Registered: 07 December 2001Reply With Quote
<KTS>
posted
Excellant, I have read about this stuff in just about every gun rag out there, and this is the best, most informative article I have read on the subject.

Personally, I am a paper puncher and don't care what the bullet does after it has safely and accuratly passed thru the target and buried itself in the berm.

However, if I wanted to experiment, and do it right, this is the article I would want.

Wes

 
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<PaulS>
posted
I built a "Fackler" box and the only thing I have to do is fill plastic bags with water!

PaulS

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stay safe and live long!

 
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<.>
posted
Jeez! I wonder if you add flavoring if it's any good as a dessert after the tests

Marshall and Sanow talk about "wet packs" being as reliable as ballistic gelatin -- for most applications.

A wet pack is simply wadded newspaper soaked in water and packed into a container. I've found plastic containers that are sufficiently long to manage handgun bullets. A 5 gal. bucket is a bit short.

Fill the container with water and pack with crumpled newspaper. Don't layer the paper in a stack (which would be easy) because it will "laminate" and you'll get too solid a consistency.

Once the paper is packed in the container, let it soak overnight. The paper will swell. You need to allow room for the swelling.

I've been able to put lids on the containers to move them to the range. Then I remove the lid, lie the container on its side and shoot.

Yes, newspaper lacks the transparent properties of gelatin, and the container will constrain some of the shock wave expansion. Nonetheless, you get a pretty good idea what the bullet will produce by way of a wound channel.

-- Watermelon is really, really impressive . . .

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.223 Ackley Improved Wildcat Forum:
http://www.hotboards.com/plus/plus.mirage?who=223ackleyimproved

 
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