Thanks
Todd May
| Todd, I am a little surprised that you have not received any replies on this subject yet. I was curious what the responses would be. You are not the first person to comment on this problem. I guess it's a good thing I had a "tummy ache" that night. BTW who won? Dan --- On Fri, 1/13/12, Todd May <to...@maysphotography.com> wrote: |
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It's not covered by NRA Rules. It would be subject to EPA air standards. It appears the ventilation is severely inadequate. Shooters need to complain and not shoot until the air is cleared or avoid this range completely until they improve theire range.
John Rickards
Fairfax, VA
---- dan allen <alle...@yahoo.com> wrote:
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|
Todd, I am a little surprised that you have not received any replies on this subject yet. I was curious what the responses would be. You are not the first person to comment on this problem. I guess it's a good thing I had a "tummy ache" that night. BTW who won? Dan --- On Fri, 1/13/12, Todd May <to...@maysphotography.com> wrote:
|
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Consider trying to handle this problem internally and without asking the government for "help." Your range, like most others is an endangered species with no protection from extinction. Tread very carefully.
F. Paul Figlia - Attorney at Law
Well said, Paul.
I carry a respirator in my range bag for such circumstances. I scored a whopping 57 on my lead test a few years back, that I attributed to poorly ventilated / cared for ranges. Available at Home Depot or the like, the P100 with the replaceable side filters does the trick for me.
Rob
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| I don't need to, or want to, shoot indoors if masks etc are needed. Your situation may vary. Jack H --- On Sat, 1/14/12, Wesley Lorenz <highmast...@gmail.com> wrote: |
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I agree. I won't shoot at ranges with poor ventilation. It's not worth it.
JC
> The problem is with private ranges that do not have the funds to properly
> vent the range.
Not poisoning the customers should be part of the business plan.
Don't want government "help"? Step up. Don't want to get sued? Step
up, or fold. That's how the marketplace works.
Every indoor range in my area has stepped up and improved ventilation.
Everyone benefits.
JC
| Steve, The range in question, of which I am a member, is a private member owned non profit shooting club. The ventilation is marginal at best and the air does get a bit thick by the end the second or third relay on league nights. Some people do wear respirators and no one wants to get the state or anybody from the EPA involved. Dan --- On Sat, 1/14/12, syu...@netzero.net <syu...@netzero.net> wrote: |
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----- Original Message -----From: Chris_D ExpertCc: dan allen
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| If you ever clean out a 22 compensator, you will be convinced there is more lead coming out the muzzle than just the projectile. Whether it be more from the projectile or the priming compound, or both, I don't know. But it is there. Jack H |
And while you call EPA or OSHA or any of the state regulatory agencies,
remember the old adage, "Be very careful what you ask for." Once you invite
that 800 pound gorilla into the room, you may find yourself with a guest who
won't leave.
Consider trying to handle this problem internally and without asking the
government for "help." Your range, like most others is an endangered species
with no protection from extinction. Tread very carefully.
F. Paul Figlia - Attorney at Law
I LIKE WHAT PAUL WROTE. VERY WISE WISDOM. ED M.
Whether there’s “hundreds of tons” at my range isn’t the point. Breathing the air there is.
Have you had your blood tested? I’m suggesting anybody that shoots indoors does.
Take it or leave it, but saying it isn’t a problem at many ranges is just wrong.
John
From:
bullsey...@googlegroups.com [mailto:bullsey...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Chris_D Expert
Sent: Saturday, January 14, 2012 5:08 PM
To: bullsey...@googlegroups.com
Cc: dan allen
Subject: Re: {Bullseye L List} Range smoke?
Firing ranges are technically toxic waste sites "The grounds of some of the nation's 8,000 public and private recreational shooting ranges are contaminated with hundreds of tons of lead from bullets," said Rick Lowden, a metallurgist with Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), a facility managed by the Department of Energy (DOE), in their Metals and Ceramics Division. Lowden is the chief developer of the ESPTM bullet.
--
>I shoot at an indoor range all the time - I live outside Chicago so outdoor ranges are a bit of a drive. Most of the time they remember to turn on the vents, sometimes they forget. I remind them and they turn it on and all is well. But, I really wonder how serious the problem actually is.
When shooting alone at 10 PM on cold nights I am guilty of turning the
fan off (to not suck in cold air as I score targets) and not turning
it back on. But I don't have clouds of smoke from others and if others
are there we have an EPA approved ventilation system and it would
remain on. I had my blood level tested 2 months ago and it was an
acceptable reading of 4 parts per bazillion (or whatever the standard
is). While not in acceptable range for an infant, well within accepted
range for an adult. The best number is obviously "zero". If one is
getting a physical, getting a lead test included is a good idea at
least every few years, IMO, and every year if the ventilation is poor
or reloading lead bullets. That's the advice I've been given.
Steve
Charlotte, NC
I use to sell to radiator repairmen. Talk about lead poising. And so what……….it is our life. We should be able to shoot indoors, ride motorcycles, race cars, skydive, scuba dive, or box…………danger is a degree only the participant should get involved in. As a farmer I inhaled more chemicals than 99+% of the population for a living, and it did not bother me. It certainly should not involve the government on what I did for a living that did not hurt me. At my age trizenes, pencap, chlordane, and 2-4D should have killed me. Instead it made my operation profitable so I can live a good retirement. Guess those days are over.
Ron
From: bullsey...@googlegroups.com [mailto:bullsey...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Chris_D Expert
Sent: Saturday, January 14, 2012 5:08 PM
To: bullsey...@googlegroups.com
Cc: dan allen
Subject: Re: {Bullseye L List} Range smoke?
Firing ranges are technically toxic waste sites "The grounds of some of the nation's 8,000 public and private recreational shooting ranges are contaminated with hundreds of tons of lead from bullets," said Rick Lowden, a metallurgist with Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), a facility managed by the Department of Energy (DOE), in their Metals and Ceramics Division. Lowden is the chief developer of the ESPTM bullet.
--
The article said there were over 8,000 shooting ranges in the US.
200,000 pounds (100 tons) of lead divided by 8,000 ranges is only 25#/range.
You know most ranges have more than that in their traps and berms.
Lead mining at ranges is a profitable concern, for the ranges and the recyclers.
It is estimated that pistol week at Perry deposits several thousand
pounds of metal on the ranges every year.
JC
Subject: Re: {Bullseye L List} Range smoke?
And while you call EPA or OSHA or any of the state regulatory agencies,
remember the old adage, "Be very careful what you ask for." Once you invite
that 800 pound gorilla into the room, you may find yourself with a guest who
won't leave.
Consider trying to handle this problem internally and without asking the
government for "help." Your range, like most others is an endangered species
with no protection from extinction. Tread very carefully.
F. Paul Figlia - Attorney at Law
I LIKE WHAT PAUL WROTE. VERY WISE WISDOM. ED M.
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
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To post to this group, send email to bullsey...@googlegroups.comMy club is in the process of renovation due to a poor air flow
system. Unfortunately, *other* problems have been found that will
require total roof replacement, tear down and relocation of kitchen
and restrooms, replacement of two heating systems, etc. While no firm
dollar numbers are yet set, I would not be surprised at a total price
tag upwards of $600K.
dd
Looks like it morphed into two actually, range safety/smoke and lead.
After reading all the replies I would agree with the thought that you DO
NOT invite the government to get involved at any level. I can just about
guarantee the range will get closed. Your best option is to choose not
to shoot there if this a continual issue. Our club just finished
building a new indoor range after almost 50 years at a basement type
poorly ventilated hole it is a huge difference. That thought leads us to
part II, the dreaded lead.
Some years back, maybe 10 or so (God has it been that long?!) , I had a
stretch where I was shooter at this old range almost daily during my
lunch break. I was shooting an "Ivan". After a couple months of
improvement I started shooting worse, tremors, forgetfulness, unable to
concentrate, irritable. Had my lead level checked and it was 64! Did a
lot of reading and a lot of discussion on the old Bullseye-l list.
Started using a P100 rated mask and washing thoroughly. Ate before I
shot and not after. After a year it was down to 10. Stays low and I have
it checked every year. As things go I don't shoot that much anymore and
my scores haven't changed much so I am not sure all of that shooting
really helped. The county health dept. wanted to know at the time why it
could be so high. I refused to tell them anything. Never trust a
bureaucracy. They do not have your interests at heart.
That said, the ventilation on the new range is best described as
"breezy" Since this is a winter league in Iowa you want to wear a
sweatshirt and warm pants while shooting or you will get chilled. This
thing really moves a lot of air. I noticed no smoke in the air during
.45 rapid the last couple matches. I am leaving the mask at home now so
we'll see how that goes.
Mike
IA
JMHO, dd