The place for general talk about gun, shooting, loading, camping, survival, and preparedness related tools and gear, as well as gear technology discussion, gear reviews, and gear specific "range reports" (all other types of gear should be on the back porch).
IMO with my experience in knives, hardness isn't what you want in a target ment to be shot at as hard stainless steels are much more shock prone than equally hard or softer carbon steels. I would expect chipping if not total catastrophic failure if you shot at it if it is as hard as they say it is. Still it is all theory, the only way to find out is to shoot at it. Depends on how thick the disc you got is as well, and it might hold up if it was adequately thick.
I'm not worried about ricochets. Any risk can be managed, and while a steel target might ricochet a bullet, it's my experience that when a standard cup-and-core bullet hits a flat steel plate, it comes apart. Not a ricochet at all, but the bullet itself fails spectacularly with lead splatter and total jacket destruction. What I am interested to see if if this steel will hold up to the impact or whether it will fail.
bubblewhip wrote:I would expect chipping if not total catastrophic failure if you shot at it if it is as hard as they say it is.
Yeah, that's the issue. Still, as you say, the only way to find out is to shoot it. I'll try to remember to take pictures and post an update when that happy event occurs.
It's not that hard, it's slightly more rust resistant than 304 because of the slightly higher Nickel content, and oh, IT FRIGGIN' WORK HARDENS IF YOU LOOK AT WRONG.
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