US2411026A - Firing range butt - Google Patents

Firing range butt Download PDF

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Publication number
US2411026A
US2411026A US523376A US52337644A US2411026A US 2411026 A US2411026 A US 2411026A US 523376 A US523376 A US 523376A US 52337644 A US52337644 A US 52337644A US 2411026 A US2411026 A US 2411026A
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chamber
projectiles
sand
granules
butt
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US523376A
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William S Conner
Charles B Wilkie
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Douglas Aircraft Co Inc
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Douglas Aircraft Co Inc
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41JTARGETS; TARGET RANGES; BULLET CATCHERS
    • F41J13/00Bullet catchers

Definitions

  • This invention relates to firing range butts
  • the plane is placed 1 within a short distance of the butt in position for firing the gun into the butt. This distance may be as small as feet.
  • the butts of present construction are masses of earth, either naturally mounded or retained by walls of wooden cribbing or concrete or of other construction. When larger projectiles from the heavier guns now mounted on airplanes are fired successively into these butts at short range, the earlier fired projectiles make a bore in the loose earth or one devoid of earth through which later fired projectiles pass at high velocity.
  • the later fired projectiles strike the earlier fired projectiles at the inner end of this bore in the earth of the butt and ricochet from them through the rearward surfaces of the butt, sometimes passing completely through the butt and causing damage to property, or injury or death to persons.
  • Another object is the reconditioning of the sand by the ready removal of the finer particles thereof.
  • a further object is to provide a butt of sand or similar material provided with an entrance tunnel of concrete or other rigid material which will deflect improperly aimed projectiles into the sand, and particularly to protect the conveying equipment, if such be provided for moving the sand for the purpose outlined above.
  • Figure l is a perspective View of a firing range utilizing a butt embodying the invention.
  • Figure 2 is a central longitudinal section of the butt shown in Figure 1.
  • Figure 3 is a horizontal section taken along the line 3-3 of Figure l, with no sand shown in the sand chamber. 7
  • Figure 4 is a transverse section taken alongthe line 4-4 of Figure 2, with no sand shown in the sand chamber.
  • a firing butt H3 At one end of a firing range 22 is a firing butt H3, and at the other end thereof an airplane emplacement Hi. Testing projectiles are fired into the butt from a gun 20 mounted on an airplane I 2 which is stationed for the test at any given distance from the butt by moving the airplane toward the butt until a nose or other ground wheel of the airplane contacts a ground abutment (not visible in the drawing)
  • the butt l0 comprises a wall structure 24 of concrete having a forward portion 26 (see Figures 2 and 3) and a rear portion 28 integrally joined to the forward portion.
  • the forward portion has a bottom wall 34, two side walls 38, 38 and a top wall 32 enclosing a tunnel or passage 30 through which projectiles are fired from the gun 20.
  • the tunnel walls diverge outwardly at their forward portions to afford a front opening 36 for receiving the projectiles even though aimed at a considerable angle to the direct line of fire 41 into the butt.
  • the tunnel is sized and shaped to deflect inwardly projectiles so improperly aimed as to strike the tunnel walls atany station between the tunnel front opening 46 and the tunnel rear opening it, though the wall taking the impact of the projectile may be damaged thereby.
  • the tunnel walls are supported at their ends by the front vertical wall 40 and by a front vertical end wall Ill of the rear concrete structure 28.
  • the wall 40 rests upona concrete footing 4
  • the tunnel wall structure is supported intermediate its ends by the central lower portion, of the earth fill I96, other continuous portions of which are banked against the side walls 38 and 38, the top, wall 32, front wall 40, and end wall 10 and also against walls of the rear concrete structure 28 to. form a mound l6 as best shown in Figure 1.
  • the rear concrete structure 28 encloses a sand chamber 48 filled with a mass 49 of sand or other like material characterized by relatively movable granules.
  • the structure 48 includes two side walls 50.
  • At the lower edges of the side walls 50. are inwardly and downwardly converging inclined lower walls 52 terminating in two narrowlyspaced parallel vertical walls 53, which, with a bottom wa11 58, define a channel shaped trough or chamber 56 for housing an endless flight conveyorBZ disposed'below and generally parallel to the line of fire 41.
  • a horizontal'partition concrete wall 60 separates the upper and lower runs of this conveyor.
  • At the upper edges of the side walls 50 are inwardly and upwardly converging inclined upper walls 54 terminating in two narrowly spaced parallel vertical walls 55 which, with a concrete bottom wall or floor 66 joining their lower edges, define a channel shaped chamber or trough 64 for housing an upper endless fiight conveyor 69 disposed above and parallel to the line of fire 41.
  • the bottom wall 66 is formed with transverse openings 68.
  • the vertical wall 10 extending upward slightly above the top level of the opening 44, a rearwardly extending horizontal wall I4 joined to the upper edge of wall I and a vertical wall 12 extendin upward from the rear edge of wall I4 to the level of the upper edges of conveyor side walls 55.
  • a rear end wall I8 extends from a level substantially below the ground level I3 to, and is joined with, the concrete conveyor floor 66.
  • the lower conveyor floor 58 is joined at its rear end with the end Wall IS.
  • the end Walls I0 and I8 are formed with sloping faces TI and 80 respectively to cooperate with the walls 52 in guiding the sand 49 to the conveyor 62 without lodgment of any portion of the mass of sand.
  • the rear concrete structure 28 also has a relatively deeply disposed bottom wall 8
  • Sand is removed by conveyor 62 from the sand chamber 48 through a horizontally slotted opening 82 in the wall 18 into the receiving chamber 84 where it drops onto the transversely sloping coarse meshed screen 90 which separates the projectiles from the sand.
  • the projectiles roll into a pit 9
  • a lower fine meshed longitudinally inclined screen 92 receives the sand, allowin the finer granules to fall therethrough and causing the coarser granules to slide through an opening 88 through the wall 81 into the bottom of the elevator chamber 86.
  • elevator chamber 86 The upper portion of elevator chamber 86 is an elongated sheet metal box 94 connected at its upper end with an enclosed sheet metal sand chute 98 which leads downward from the upper end of the box 94 to the rear end of the conveyor chamber 64.
  • a metal cover plate I00 protects the conveyor 69 in the chamber 64.
  • An elevatin conveyor 96 lifts sand received from screen 92 to the chute 98.
  • a target I02 may be slidably moved from target chamber I04 into place across the opening 44.
  • the earth fill I06 is banked beneath and at the sides of the rear concrete structure 28, leaving the cover plate I00 exposed for removal to gain access to the mechanical equipment of the sand chamber 48.
  • the tunnel 30, by deflecting inwardly improperly aimed projectiles, protects the upper and lower conveyor equipment from injury.
  • the operation of the firing butt is, for the most part, apparent from the foregoing description.
  • the gun 20 is aimed at the target I02 and one or .more projectiles are fired therefrom into the sand 49.
  • the conveyors 62 and 69 and the elevator 96 are continuously operated while the butt is in use. Removal of the sand from the bottom of the sand chamber 48 by the lower conveyor 62 causes the sand in the chamber to descend slowly, carrying with it the projectiles embedded therein, no two of which will therefore be at the same level. Thus it becomes impossible-for one projectile to strike an earlier fired projectile and ricochet therefrom to cause damage to the butt or to surrounding property or injury to persons in the neighborhood.
  • the sand carrying with it the projectiles is discharged into the separating chamber 84 and the projectiles and fine sand removed therefrom in the manner already described.
  • the sand free of projectiles is returned by the elevator 96 to the upper end of the chute 98, down which it moves, to be engaged by the upper conveyor 69 and moved horizontally and longitudinally of the sand chamber to be dropped through opening 68 to the top surface of the sand mass in the chamber 48.
  • the lines I08 indicate the inclined upper surface contour of the sand mass in the sand chamber below the upper conveyor floor 66 and the line IIO indicates the surface contour of the sand mass from the lower edge of the wall 12 to the lower edge of the target Opening 44.
  • the offset spacing of the wall I2 to the rear of the target opening prevents any of the sand flowing into the target opening and interfering with the placement and removal of the target. It also prevents the permanent lodgment of any sand in the rear end of the tunnel 30. Should sand thus project into the tunnel and hold one or more projectiles, these projectiles would remain stationary in the sand mass and not be removed from the sand chamber, creating the possibility of other projectiles striking them and being ricochetted from the butt.
  • a retaining wall structure a mass of relatively movable granules confined by said structure, said structure being formed with an opening to permit projectiles to be fired into said mass without striking said structure; and means mounted within said structure outside of the path of 'said projectiles for moving said mass transversely of the path of the projectiles through said mass.
  • retaining walls providing a chamber for holdme a mass of relatively movable granules, said walls having an opening for the admission of the fired projectiles; and means for cyclically moving said mass of granules in said chamber to provide a stream of granules constantly moving transversely of the path of the projectiles entering the chamber.
  • conveyor means capable of continuous operation for movin a mass of granules in said chamber downward through said chamber by removing granules from a lower level below the path of the projectiles in the chamber and returning the granules to an upper level of the chamber above said path.
  • said moving means comprises a first horizontal conveyor at said lowe level, a receiving chamber at the discharge end of said horizontal conveyor, an elevating conveyor from said receiving chamber to a level at least as high as said upper level, and a second horizontal conveyor to receive the granules from the upper end of said elevating conveyor and discharge the granules at said upper level, and in addition thereto; a separating screen in said receiving chamber across the path of the granules and arranged in an inclined plane for separating the projectiles from the granules'and discharging them by gravity laterally of the receiving chamber.
  • said moving means comprises a first horizontal conveyor at said lower level, a receiving chamber at the discharge end of said horizontal conveyor, an elevating conveyor from said receiving chamber to a level at least as high as said upper level and a second horizontal conveyor to receive the granules from the upper end of said elevating conveyor and discharge the granules at said upper level
  • said walls are of cement concrete and include two side walls generally longitudinally parallel to the projectile path, the said side walls below the level of the projectile path being flared inwardly and downwardly terminating in relatively narrowly spaced vertical walls, housing said first horizontal conveyor, and above said path level being flared inwardly and upwardly terminating in relatively narrowly spaced vertical walls, housing said second horizontal conveyor, and in addition thereto; a mass of earthy material banked against the exterior of said side walls.
  • a retaining wall structure providing a laterally enclosed space and having an opening through a vertical wall thereof for the passage of projectiles into said space; a second wall structure integrally joined to said first wall structure and providing at least the top and side walls of a tunnel communicating with said opening and also for the passage of said projectiles, at least the inner end portion of said tunnel having substantially the cross section of said opening; a mass of relatively movable granules held to form within said space; means for cyclically moving said mass of granules to provide a stream of granules constantly moving transversely of the interior end portion of said tunnel; and a mass of earthy material banked against the exterior of at least the side walls of said wall structures.
  • means for moving said mass of granules downward through said chamber by removing granules from a lower level below the path of the projectiles in the chamber and returning said granules to the top surface level of said mass comprising mechanical equipment disposed at least in part in transverse alignment with said mass with reference to the longitudinal lines of said passage and above and below said opening.
  • said moving means comprises a first horizontal conveyor at said lower level, a receiving chamber. at the discharge end of said horizontal conveyor, an elevating conveyor from said receiving chamber to a level at least as high as said upper level, and a second horizontal conveyor to receive the granules from the upper end of said elevating conveyor and discharge the projectiles from the granules and discharging them by gravity laterally of the receiving chamber; and a second separating screen in said receiving chamber across the path of said granules for separating relatively smaller granules from the relatively larger granules.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Aiming, Guidance, Guns With A Light Source, Armor, Camouflage, And Targets (AREA)

Description

Nov. 12, 1946. w. s. CONNER ET AL FIRING RANGE BUTT Filed Feb. 21, 1944 3 Sheets-Sheet 1 xvi-v:
Mil/4M d: (ON/YER (HA/Fifi B.MZA/
INVENTO S. 4% ATTORNEY Nov. 12, 1946. w. s. CONNER Em. 2,411,026
FIRING RANGE BUTT Filed Feb. 21, 1944 5 Sheets-Sheet 2 IN V EN TORS w. s. CONNER ETAL FIRING RANGE BUTT Filed Feb. 21, 194
3 Sheets$heet 3 W/Zz/AMacM/vm COW/Pit; dW/l/Ilf v INVENTORS.
2 ATZUIPNEY Patented Nov. '12, 1946 UNITED STATES FIRING RANGE BUTT William S. Conner, Long Beach, and Charles B.
Wilkie, Los Angeles, Calif., assignors to Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc.,
Calif.
Santa Monica,
Application February 21, i944, Serial No. 523,376
This invention relates to firing range butts,
and particularly to butts for firing ranges used in testing airplanes for withstanding recoil stresses resulting from firing a gun mounted on the plane.
In carrying on these tests the plane is placed 1 within a short distance of the butt in position for firing the gun into the butt. This distance may be as small as feet. The butts of present construction are masses of earth, either naturally mounded or retained by walls of wooden cribbing or concrete or of other construction. When larger projectiles from the heavier guns now mounted on airplanes are fired successively into these butts at short range, the earlier fired projectiles make a bore in the loose earth or one devoid of earth through which later fired projectiles pass at high velocity. The later fired projectiles strike the earlier fired projectiles at the inner end of this bore in the earth of the butt and ricochet from them through the rearward surfaces of the butt, sometimes passing completely through the butt and causing damage to property, or injury or death to persons.
It is an object of this invention to provide a butt which will stop all of the projectiles fired successively thereinto, and which will be reconditioned after any one shot for the safe reception of the next shot.
It is another object of the invention to provide a butt of movable, and preferably continuously movable, mass of sand or other granular proj ectile-receiving material to prevent one projectile striking another earlier fired projectile.
It is Still another object to provide means for readily separating and removing the projectiles from the sand.
Another object is the reconditioning of the sand by the ready removal of the finer particles thereof.
A further object is to provide a butt of sand or similar material provided with an entrance tunnel of concrete or other rigid material which will deflect improperly aimed projectiles into the sand, and particularly to protect the conveying equipment, if such be provided for moving the sand for the purpose outlined above.
In the drawings, which illustrate one'embodiment of the invention,
Figure l is a perspective View of a firing range utilizing a butt embodying the invention.
Figure 2 is a central longitudinal section of the butt shown in Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a horizontal section taken along the line 3-3 of Figure l, with no sand shown in the sand chamber. 7
llClaims. (Cl. 273102.4)
Figure 4 is a transverse section taken alongthe line 4-4 of Figure 2, with no sand shown in the sand chamber.
As shown in Figure 1, at one end of a firing range 22 is a firing butt H3, and at the other end thereof an airplane emplacement Hi. Testing projectiles are fired into the butt from a gun 20 mounted on an airplane I 2 which is stationed for the test at any given distance from the butt by moving the airplane toward the butt until a nose or other ground wheel of the airplane contacts a ground abutment (not visible in the drawing) The butt l0 comprises a wall structure 24 of concrete having a forward portion 26 (see Figures 2 and 3) and a rear portion 28 integrally joined to the forward portion. The forward portion has a bottom wall 34, two side walls 38, 38 and a top wall 32 enclosing a tunnel or passage 30 through which projectiles are fired from the gun 20. The tunnel walls diverge outwardly at their forward portions to afford a front opening 36 for receiving the projectiles even though aimed at a considerable angle to the direct line of fire 41 into the butt. The tunnel is sized and shaped to deflect inwardly projectiles so improperly aimed as to strike the tunnel walls atany station between the tunnel front opening 46 and the tunnel rear opening it, though the wall taking the impact of the projectile may be damaged thereby.
The tunnel walls are supported at their ends by the front vertical wall 40 and by a front vertical end wall Ill of the rear concrete structure 28. The wall 40 rests upona concrete footing 4| and has two earth retaining wings 42. The tunnel wall structure is supported intermediate its ends by the central lower portion, of the earth fill I96, other continuous portions of which are banked against the side walls 38 and 38, the top, wall 32, front wall 40, and end wall 10 and also against walls of the rear concrete structure 28 to. form a mound l6 as best shown in Figure 1.
The rear concrete structure 28 encloses a sand chamber 48 filled with a mass 49 of sand or other like material characterized by relatively movable granules. The structure 48 includes two side walls 50.
At the lower edges of the side walls 50. are inwardly and downwardly converging inclined lower walls 52 terminating in two narrowlyspaced parallel vertical walls 53, which, with a bottom wa11 58, define a channel shaped trough or chamber 56 for housing an endless flight conveyorBZ disposed'below and generally parallel to the line of fire 41. A horizontal'partition concrete wall 60 separates the upper and lower runs of this conveyor. At the upper edges of the side walls 50 are inwardly and upwardly converging inclined upper walls 54 terminating in two narrowly spaced parallel vertical walls 55 which, with a concrete bottom wall or floor 66 joining their lower edges, define a channel shaped chamber or trough 64 for housing an upper endless fiight conveyor 69 disposed above and parallel to the line of fire 41. The bottom wall 66 is formed with transverse openings 68.
At the front end of the sand chamber 48 is the vertical wall 10 extending upward slightly above the top level of the opening 44, a rearwardly extending horizontal wall I4 joined to the upper edge of wall I and a vertical wall 12 extendin upward from the rear edge of wall I4 to the level of the upper edges of conveyor side walls 55. A rear end wall I8 extends from a level substantially below the ground level I3 to, and is joined with, the concrete conveyor floor 66. The lower conveyor floor 58 is joined at its rear end with the end Wall IS. The end Walls I0 and I8 are formed with sloping faces TI and 80 respectively to cooperate with the walls 52 in guiding the sand 49 to the conveyor 62 without lodgment of any portion of the mass of sand.
The rear concrete structure 28 also has a relatively deeply disposed bottom wall 8|, rear wall 83, side walls 85 and a vertical transverse partition wall 81, which with the lower portion of the wall I8 define a sand receiving chamber 84 and the lower portion of an elevator chamber 06. Sand is removed by conveyor 62 from the sand chamber 48 through a horizontally slotted opening 82 in the wall 18 into the receiving chamber 84 where it drops onto the transversely sloping coarse meshed screen 90 which separates the projectiles from the sand. The projectiles roll into a pit 9| from which they may be periodically removed.
A lower fine meshed longitudinally inclined screen 92 receives the sand, allowin the finer granules to fall therethrough and causing the coarser granules to slide through an opening 88 through the wall 81 into the bottom of the elevator chamber 86. These finer granules made so by the impact of the projectiles and the operation of the conveying equipment, are relatively less effective in absorbing the kinetic energy of r the projectiles and bringing them to a stop.
The upper portion of elevator chamber 86 is an elongated sheet metal box 94 connected at its upper end with an enclosed sheet metal sand chute 98 which leads downward from the upper end of the box 94 to the rear end of the conveyor chamber 64. A metal cover plate I00 protects the conveyor 69 in the chamber 64. An elevatin conveyor 96 lifts sand received from screen 92 to the chute 98.
A target I02 may be slidably moved from target chamber I04 into place across the opening 44. The earth fill I06 is banked beneath and at the sides of the rear concrete structure 28, leaving the cover plate I00 exposed for removal to gain access to the mechanical equipment of the sand chamber 48. The tunnel 30, by deflecting inwardly improperly aimed projectiles, protects the upper and lower conveyor equipment from injury.
The operation of the firing butt is, for the most part, apparent from the foregoing description. After an airplane I2 has been placed in position for test firing, the gun 20 is aimed at the target I02 and one or .more projectiles are fired therefrom into the sand 49. The conveyors 62 and 69 and the elevator 96 are continuously operated while the butt is in use. Removal of the sand from the bottom of the sand chamber 48 by the lower conveyor 62 causes the sand in the chamber to descend slowly, carrying with it the projectiles embedded therein, no two of which will therefore be at the same level. Thus it becomes impossible-for one projectile to strike an earlier fired projectile and ricochet therefrom to cause damage to the butt or to surrounding property or injury to persons in the neighborhood. The sand carrying with it the projectiles is discharged into the separating chamber 84 and the projectiles and fine sand removed therefrom in the manner already described. The sand free of projectiles is returned by the elevator 96 to the upper end of the chute 98, down which it moves, to be engaged by the upper conveyor 69 and moved horizontally and longitudinally of the sand chamber to be dropped through opening 68 to the top surface of the sand mass in the chamber 48.
The lines I08 indicate the inclined upper surface contour of the sand mass in the sand chamber below the upper conveyor floor 66 and the line IIO indicates the surface contour of the sand mass from the lower edge of the wall 12 to the lower edge of the target Opening 44. The offset spacing of the wall I2 to the rear of the target opening prevents any of the sand flowing into the target opening and interfering with the placement and removal of the target. It also prevents the permanent lodgment of any sand in the rear end of the tunnel 30. Should sand thus project into the tunnel and hold one or more projectiles, these projectiles would remain stationary in the sand mass and not be removed from the sand chamber, creating the possibility of other projectiles striking them and being ricochetted from the butt.
While one embodiment of this invention has been described and illustrated it is apparent that the invention is not limited to this one embodiment. Its scope is defined in the following claims.
We claim:
1. In a butt for a firing range, the combination of: a retaining wall structure; a mass of relatively movable granules confined by said structure, said structure being formed with an opening to permit projectiles to be fired into said mass without striking said structure; and means mounted within said structure outside of the path of 'said projectiles for moving said mass transversely of the path of the projectiles through said mass.
2. In a butt for a firing range, the combination of: retaining walls providing a chamber for holdme a mass of relatively movable granules, said walls having an opening for the admission of the fired projectiles; and means for cyclically moving said mass of granules in said chamber to provide a stream of granules constantly moving transversely of the path of the projectiles entering the chamber.
3. In a butt for a firing range, the combination of: upright retaining walls providing a chamber for holding a mass of relatively movable granules, said walls having an opening thereinto through one of said walls for the admission of the fired projectiles and said opening being arranged to prevent loss of granules therethrough from said mass; and means for moving a mass of granules in said chamber downward through said chamber by removing granules from a lower level below the path of the projectiles in the chamber and returning the granules to an upper level of the chamber above said path.
4. In a butt for a firing range, the combination of: upright retaining walls providing a chamber for holding a mass of relatively movable granules, said chamber having an opening thereinto through one of said Walls for the admission of the fired projectiles and said opening being so,
constructed and arranged to prevent loss of granules therethrough from said mass; and means including conveyor means capable of continuous operation for movin a mass of granules in said chamber downward through said chamber by removing granules from a lower level below the path of the projectiles in the chamber and returning the granules to an upper level of the chamber above said path.
5. The combination defined in claim 4, and in addition thereto; a separator disposed along said moving means for separating and removing projectiles from the granules.
6. The combination defined in claim 4 in which said moving means comprises a first horizontal conveyor at said lowe level, a receiving chamber at the discharge end of said horizontal conveyor, an elevating conveyor from said receiving chamber to a level at least as high as said upper level, and a second horizontal conveyor to receive the granules from the upper end of said elevating conveyor and discharge the granules at said upper level, and in addition thereto; a separating screen in said receiving chamber across the path of the granules and arranged in an inclined plane for separating the projectiles from the granules'and discharging them by gravity laterally of the receiving chamber.
7. The combination defined in claim 4 in which said moving means comprises a first horizontal conveyor at said lower level, a receiving chamber at the discharge end of said horizontal conveyor, an elevating conveyor from said receiving chamber to a level at least as high as said upper level and a second horizontal conveyor to receive the granules from the upper end of said elevating conveyor and discharge the granules at said upper level, and in which said walls are of cement concrete and include two side walls generally longitudinally parallel to the projectile path, the said side walls below the level of the projectile path being flared inwardly and downwardly terminating in relatively narrowly spaced vertical walls, housing said first horizontal conveyor, and above said path level being flared inwardly and upwardly terminating in relatively narrowly spaced vertical walls, housing said second horizontal conveyor, and in addition thereto; a mass of earthy material banked against the exterior of said side walls.
8. In a butt for a firing of: a retaining wall structure providing a laterally enclosed space and having an opening through a vertical wall thereof for the passage of projectiles into said space; a second wall structure integrally joined to said first wall structure and providing at least the top and side walls of a tunnel communicating with said opening and also for the passage of said projectiles, at least the inner end portion of said tunnel having substantially the cross section of said opening; a mass of relatively movable granules held to form within said space; means for cyclically moving said mass of granules to provide a stream of granules constantly moving transversely of the interior end portion of said tunnel; and a mass of earthy material banked against the exterior of at least the side walls of said wall structures.
9. The combination defined in claim 8 in which said retaining wall above said opening is horizontally ofiset interiorly of said space to prevent granules entering said opening; and in addition thereto a target mounted in said opening.
10. The combination defined in claim 8, and in addition thereto; means for moving said mass of granules downward through said chamber by removing granules from a lower level below the path of the projectiles in the chamber and returning said granules to the top surface level of said mass, comprising mechanical equipment disposed at least in part in transverse alignment with said mass with reference to the longitudinal lines of said passage and above and below said opening.
11. The combination defined in claim 4 in which said moving means comprises a first horizontal conveyor at said lower level, a receiving chamber. at the discharge end of said horizontal conveyor, an elevating conveyor from said receiving chamber to a level at least as high as said upper level, and a second horizontal conveyor to receive the granules from the upper end of said elevating conveyor and discharge the projectiles from the granules and discharging them by gravity laterally of the receiving chamber; and a second separating screen in said receiving chamber across the path of said granules for separating relatively smaller granules from the relatively larger granules.
WILLIAM S. CONNER. CHARLES E. WILKIE.
range, the combination
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Cited By (21)

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US2670959A (en) * 1950-07-28 1954-03-02 Daniel N Broyles Shooting gallery
US2783047A (en) * 1954-02-23 1957-02-26 Svenska Aeroplan Ab Target hit indicator
US2815955A (en) * 1954-08-09 1957-12-10 Olin Mathieson Apparatus for recovering projectiles
WO1985005672A1 (en) * 1984-06-01 1985-12-19 Impresa Costruzioni Soc. Fra.Sa A R.L. Ballistic projectile-arrester, having a regeneration and/or recovery system for the impact material
EP0227612A1 (en) * 1985-12-20 1987-07-01 A.B.C. Appalti Bonifiche e Costruzioni di Elio Floria & C. s.a.s. Equipment with energy knocking-down septum for bullets, to be installed in shooting ranges
US4919437A (en) * 1987-12-03 1990-04-24 Impresa Costruzioni Soc. Fra.Sa. A R.L. Self-regeneration ballistic projectile-arrester
EP0399960A2 (en) * 1989-05-22 1990-11-28 IMPRESA COSTRUZIONI SOC. FRA.SA a R.L. Conveying and separation unit for ballistic projectile arresters
EP0405616A3 (en) * 1984-06-01 1991-01-30 Impresa Costruzioni Soc. Fra.Sa. A R.L. Ballistic projectile-arrester having a regeneration and recovery system for the projectile braking material
US6378870B1 (en) 1999-12-24 2002-04-30 Action Target, Inc. Apparatus and method for decelerating projectiles
US6533280B1 (en) 2000-03-03 2003-03-18 H. Addison Sovine Bullet backstop assembly
US20030177895A1 (en) * 2001-12-12 2003-09-25 Spencer Lambert Bullet trap
US6808178B1 (en) 2000-08-28 2004-10-26 Action Target, Inc. Clearing trap
US20060107985A1 (en) * 2004-04-13 2006-05-25 Sovine H A Modular shoot house facility
US20090206551A1 (en) * 2002-09-17 2009-08-20 Jimmy Alan Parks Projectile Retrieval System
US7621209B2 (en) 2002-07-12 2009-11-24 Action Target Acquisition Crop. Modular ballistic wall
US7775526B1 (en) 2001-12-12 2010-08-17 Action Target Inc. Bullet trap
US20100327531A1 (en) * 2007-09-26 2010-12-30 Colt Defense Llc Portable firing berm
US8469364B2 (en) 2006-05-08 2013-06-25 Action Target Inc. Movable bullet trap
US8827273B2 (en) 2010-08-02 2014-09-09 Action Target Inc. Clearing trap
US10371489B2 (en) 2016-01-15 2019-08-06 Action Target Inc. Bullet deceleration tray damping mechanism
RU193361U1 (en) * 2019-09-06 2019-10-28 Федеральное казенное предприятие "Научно-исследовательский институт "Геодезия" (ФКП "НИИ "Геодезия") Device for catching booster carriages and their fragments

Cited By (40)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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US2670959A (en) * 1950-07-28 1954-03-02 Daniel N Broyles Shooting gallery
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