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one of us |
Anyone know of a recipe for ballistic gelatin? Is it hard to work with or is something easier? | ||
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one of us |
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 You will also need Thymol or cinnamon oil as a clarifier, which is To do this right, establish the tare weight of a 5 gallon stainless After the gelatin is dissolved, in 10-15 minutes, turn off the Place the gelatin in a refrigerator overnight at 0-5 degs. C. The Once the gelatin is removed from the mould it should be allowed to Evaluation of the blocks is best accomplished by flash X-ray ------------------ | |||
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one of us |
Piece of cake! | |||
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<PaulS> |
I built a "Fackler" box and the only thing I have to do is fill plastic bags with water! PaulS ------------------ | ||
<.> |
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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