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Bullet trap

  • US 5,070,763 A
  • Filed: 12/14/1990
  • Issued: 12/10/1991
  • Est. Priority Date: 12/14/1990
  • Status: Expired due to Term
First Claim
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1. A bullet trap for catching and deenergizing a bullet fired along a substantially horizontal path of flight from a firearm, which trap includes a first pair of spaced flat metal plates located on opposite sides of the path of flight of the bullet and a second pair of spaced flat metal plates arranged transverse to said first metal plates on opposite sides of the flight path of the bullet, with said plates defining the respective sides of a passageway having at its front end an entrance opening and at its rear end a throat through which the bullet can pass, and a spent bullet decelerating and energy-dissipating chamber the circumferential boundary wall of which is of generally spiral configuration and the opposite end walls of which are constituted by portions of said second plates, with said passageway communicating with said chamber substantially tangentially of the latter through said throat;

  • the improvement comprising that;

    (a) said first plates (i) are made of high tensile steel, (ii) are located, respectively, above and below said path of flight of the bullet, and (iii) are oriented at respective angles of inclination of between 0° and

    about 7°

    to the horizontal;

    (b) said decelerating and energy-dissipating chamber has a substantially horizontal axis between said opposite end walls, and said circumferential boundary wall of said chamber is defined by a curved extension of the lower one of said first plates, (i) an initial part of said circumferential boundary wall extending from said throat generally rearwardly of said passageway first at an inclination to the horizontal substantially the same as that of said lower first plate and then arcuately upwardly relative thereto, (ii) a middle part of said circumferential boundary wall extending arcuately from said initial part generally frontwardly of said passageway first upwardly and then downwardly, and (iii) a terminal part of said circumferential boundary wall extending arcuately from said middle part downwardly and generally rearwardly of said passageway into substantially coplanar relation with the upper one of said first plates and having an end edge overlying the region of said initial part of said circumferential boundary wall contiguous to said lower first plate; and

    (c) the entire circumferential boundary wall of said chamber having no part the radius of curvature of which is less than about 28 inches;

    whereby a bullet fired into said passageway through said entrance opening along a substantially horizontal path of flight and coming into contact with one of said first plates is deflected thereby through a small angle into a flight path running generally along the contacted first plate but out of contact therewith and ultimately passes through said throat of said passageway and impacts against said initial part of said circumferential boundary wall of said chamber at a relatively low angle so as not to be shattered thereby nor to damage the same, and the bullet then circumnavigates the chamber with gradually decreasing speed while in contact with said circumferential boundary wall until the energy of the bullet has been substantially dissipated, so that the spent bullet ultimately falls from said terminal part of said circumferential boundary wall over said end edge thereof onto said initial part of said circumferential boundary wall just rearwardly of said throat of said passageway and moves through said throat back into said passageway and along said lower first plate for removal from the trap.

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