Was running the timer for another shooter yesterday, his last target to engage was an 8" steel plate that hangs down from a frame. Target surface is used but in no way pockmarked or otherwise flawed. We were maybe 10 yards away, slightly off angle from straight in front of the target. The handgun was a 9mm semi auto, 115 grain full metal jacket ammunition, not +P or the like. Shooter's bullet struck the target close to the center. I could see a big chunk of something headed my way, but of course not in time to move out of its path. Turned out to be a flattened out sliver of the copper jacket, maybe about a fourth of the total jacket material. Left a welt and small cut below the bottom of my shooting glasses, 1.5" below the left eye. To be honest I've probably cut myself worse while shaving, but then again I don't push the razor towards my face at 200-300 feet per second or so like that bullet sliver was doing.
Given the fact that we weren't perpendicular to the front of the target, the frags should go elsewhere, right? No, you Geometry Geniuses, that isn't always the case at all. Just the fact that the bullet spins while traveling makes any real prediction of splatter direction after impact a big old question mark. You can take a good stab at where it should go much of the time, but that's it.
This has re-renewed my insistence that everybody at a shooting range with me WILL wear their glasses, period. If you come to the OFCC Fun and Gun at TDI this year, and get in the squad I'll be helping to run, be advised: You take your eye protection off at the wrong time, expect the next sensation you feel to be my foot on your backside, doing its best possible impression of an NFL placekicker trying to break the record for longest field goal.

