Anonymous
Välkommen Gäst
Moderatorer: Leopold, Nitro, atte69
Leopold skrev:Även intressant att du ser liknande precision med dessa blyfria i alla fall på korta avstånd. Det viktiga för mig är mest hur de funkar precisionsmässigt på litet längre avstånd så där får vi hjälpas åt allihop att utvärdera ytterligare, hur de uppför sig i väder och vind osv.
Måste försöka ordna en burk av dessa blyfria kulor för en rejäl utvärdering, tack för dina "teasers"!
Henno3 skrev:En snabb dum fråga ang dessa lätta blyfria.
Hur påverkas Joulen? Vart hamnar man i en fjäderbössa som man balanserar på 10j idag med tyngre blyad kula?
Blir det +/- 0 eller blir det högre eller lägre?
börne skrev:Henno3 skrev:En snabb dum fråga ang dessa lätta blyfria.
Hur påverkas Joulen? Vart hamnar man i en fjäderbössa som man balanserar på 10j idag med tyngre blyad kula?
Blir det +/- 0 eller blir det högre eller lägre?
Hastigheten ökar ju så det brukar inte diffa mycket.
Henno3 skrev:Så man behöver inte vara orolig att man då kommer stå här med ett gäng licenspliktiga fjäderbössor då?!
Henno3 skrev:börne skrev:Henno3 skrev:En snabb dum fråga ang dessa lätta blyfria.
Hur påverkas Joulen? Vart hamnar man i en fjäderbössa som man balanserar på 10j idag med tyngre blyad kula?
Blir det +/- 0 eller blir det högre eller lägre?
Hastigheten ökar ju så det brukar inte diffa mycket.
Så man behöver inte vara orolig att man då kommer stå här med ett gäng licenspliktiga fjäderbössor då?!
During the last 20 years, there have been
numerous medical evaluations to deter-
mine whether individuals who practice reg-
ular air rifle or air pistol target shooting are
exposed to any real health risks as a re-
sult of handling lead pellets or being pres-
ent on ranges during the firing of air rifles
or pistols. Shooters in the U. S. Olympic
Training Center Resident Athlete program
at Colorado Springs, Colorado train on a
daily basis with air rifles or air pistols. USOC-monitored blood
lead-level testing is routinely required and conducted. This test-
ing has never detected a single case of elevated lead levels that
required medical intervention among athletes in the program. In
fact, most athletes in these tests had lead levels well below the
lead levels found in the general population.
These medical evaluations are especially important in under-
standing the extremely low risk to those who practice air gun
marksmanship because Olympic Training Center athletes regu-
larly do several hours of range training every day, five or six days
per week, throughout the entire year. This testing by the U. S.
Olympic Committee demonstrated that even individuals who en-
gage in extensive air rifle and pistol firing on a daily basis are not
exposed to lead that in any way endangers or adversely affects
their health. Participants in youth or club marksmanship programs
typically have exposures that are much less than what these ath-
letes have so it is probable that their exposures are even less
than those evaluated in the USOC tests.
In addition, colleges, like the Univ. of West Virginia and Univ. of
Kentucky, whose NCAA rifle team members also do extensive
daily training with air rifles and smallbore rifles, have mandated
blood lead-level testing for their rifle team members. Their tests
also produced negative results similar to those from the USOC
tests. Several national shooting organizations, including federa-
tions in Germany, Sweden, Finland and Norway, report lead tests
with similar results. No known tests conducted by qualified medi-
cal personnel have shown that air rifle or air pistol shooters who
follow recommended hygiene practices and who do not have sig-
nificant lead exposures outside of the shooting range have de-
veloped elevated lead levels as a result of air gun shooting, even
among the shooters who practice and train the most.
All available medical testing shows that air rifle and air pistol tar-
get shooting participants do not develop elevated lead levels as a
result of this activity. Target shooting with air rifles and smallbore
rifles does not create real health risks for shooting sports partici-
pants....
The issue of whether air gun firing creates airborne lead was re-
examined in 2007 tests conducted by Health & Environmental
Technology (HET), a professional environmental testing firm from
Colorado Springs, Colorado. These tests were conducted on an
air gun range at the U. S. Olympic Shooting Center. For these
tests, air samplers were placed in the breathing space of the air
gun shooters while they fired and next to the target backstops. No
measurable airborne lead was detected by any of these monitors
during air gun firing. These tests confirmed Dr. Lösel’s conclusion
that breathable airborne lead is not generated by firing air gun
pellets at the velocities prescribed for target air guns.
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