Any of the ELR type rifle or long range hunting bullets is sailing straight thorough body armor as well as plates.
While tungsten can be toxic, you really have to be unlucky to have an issue with it. It is widely used in everything from light bulbs to metalworking.
You would have a more realistic chance of being poisoned by the lead in standard bullets.[/QUOTE]
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1) I agree with you at the extreme ELR distances it is not so much an issue but at a closer range say 600-1000 yards? Those steel plates are expensive! I think your local range official might have an issue with it. Remember that we are not all blessed living out west where you have lots of options for practicing at ELR.
The EPA is tying to pull out as many of the heavy toxic metals as it can including lead. Tungsten residue is some pretty nasty stuff. Special precautions have to be made in machining and somebody has to clean up that mess afterwards. The same problem goes on at a outdoor shooting ranges where local environmental concerns are involved. Lead cleanup at an indoor or outdoor range is bad enough and introducing another toxic substance would only make matters worse.
BTW: Tungsten has been used for many decades in the Military such as in slap munitions and as we all know the depleted uranium stuff proved way too toxic to keep on using.
2) The use of a polymer coating on match bullets is not the issue. IMO - The migration of its wide spread use to other types of bullets is where the real problem lies.
..... So not to derail this thread further I think this topic might be a worthy for opening up in another thread.... My apologies to Theis
While tungsten can be toxic, you really have to be unlucky to have an issue with it. It is widely used in everything from light bulbs to metalworking.
You would have a more realistic chance of being poisoned by the lead in standard bullets.[/QUOTE]
------------------
1) I agree with you at the extreme ELR distances it is not so much an issue but at a closer range say 600-1000 yards? Those steel plates are expensive! I think your local range official might have an issue with it. Remember that we are not all blessed living out west where you have lots of options for practicing at ELR.
The EPA is tying to pull out as many of the heavy toxic metals as it can including lead. Tungsten residue is some pretty nasty stuff. Special precautions have to be made in machining and somebody has to clean up that mess afterwards. The same problem goes on at a outdoor shooting ranges where local environmental concerns are involved. Lead cleanup at an indoor or outdoor range is bad enough and introducing another toxic substance would only make matters worse.
BTW: Tungsten has been used for many decades in the Military such as in slap munitions and as we all know the depleted uranium stuff proved way too toxic to keep on using.
2) The use of a polymer coating on match bullets is not the issue. IMO - The migration of its wide spread use to other types of bullets is where the real problem lies.
..... So not to derail this thread further I think this topic might be a worthy for opening up in another thread.... My apologies to Theis
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