Hey guys, don't get too attached to your steel gongs. I am the vice President of our local gun club ( in Northern California), and as such have been put in charge of the lead retrieval/salvage on our range. The counties risk management devision has stalled our operation, because we have been shooting steel reactive targets on the range, since the early seventies. The legal beagles have bought into the theory that lead bullets impacting steel targets fragments the lead into small enough particles, that if disturbed would become airborne, and create a health risk.
I thought this was a local/county misconception, but upon talking to other clubs in my area, that have ranges that regularly use steel reactive targets, I find this is the new, and pervasive theory, among legal departments. One of the clubs farther north has already been forced into using rubber reactive targets, with plastic sand barrels behind them to catch the spend bullets.
Just be aware that invasive stupidity, always seems to start on the coasts, and works towards the middle.
Hungry Horse