Tunnel shooting project

RTH1800

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  • Sep 16, 2009
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    In the next year I will be in possession of approximate 1 mile of 26” pipe. Thinking of setting up a 100 yard tunnel for rimfire testing.
    This is just early planning stages at this point.
    Thoughts, suggestions or is anyone interested it the excess pipe for a similar project?
    Thanks
    RTH
     
    In that case, I'd be careful of ventilation and possible effects on trajectory. My local range has a 100yd concrete culvert and with the venitlation on it seems to blow projectiles around odd as it seems.
     
    sighting down the middle of the 26" pipe i believe the max range you can get (with Eley Target ) before the trajectory clips the 'roof' of the pipe is c. 170m (i dont know the thickness of the pipe wall so i guessed at 2" )
    sighting close to the bottom would give a max range of c. 220m .
     
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    Probably be money ahead to go to Eley in Texas. Bass Pro in Springfield used to have a 100 yard tunnel, not sure if they still do. I've shoot in it, back in he day you could rent it hourly.
     
    What’s the highest vertical rise for 22LR even at 200 yards has to be too high for a small diameter pipe

    according to Strelok a 26" pipe with 3/8" wall thickness will get you to 202 yards firing down the center (Eley Match at 1088 fps vertical rise 12.3" ) and c. 268 yds sighting close to the bottom.
     
    The club that I belong to has a 100 yard underground tunnel range built with 24" diameter concrete pipe. I find it perfect for testing rimfire ammo. There are a couple of things that I have found to be important for best results like keeping your bullet trajectory centered in the pipe. I have also found that shooting out of a return to battery machine rest is the only reliable method of getting results that will repeat due to the mirage condition that exists in there.
     
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    Growing up we built one attached to our cellar. We used 55 gallon drums, cut out both ends and spot welded them together. They were a few feet under ground. Had a hatch at the end to change targets and the light bulb. Backstop was just the earth. Ventilation was leave cellar door open. Ha ha. Just the way it was in the old days. Great for load development.
     
    I am getting a lot of inquires. Surprising as that was not my intent. I have decided against doing the project. The pipe will be pulled and sold but will take from one to two years. I suspect it will have more value for industrial use in culverts etc than for rifle range. I will post up once we get it pulled.
    Thanks,
    RTH
     
    do you have any idea what that pipe is worth. You could sell it and build a good indoor range. If the pipe your talking about is what we here in Texas use for pipelines. Your talking close to 100,000 dollars or more