@@motoz30 i just took the 10/22 out to sight it, I have logs stacked between trees to make a wall, I plan on making another stack behind it, but with the logs 90'ed , (*ive heard some rounds tumble thru) *neighbors are 200yards away
faultroy I got out finally, moved over to Nevada. It has much of the beauty you would expect in California, without the ever incipient government (for now). I agree that in the 70's and earlier, California truly seem to be a magical place.
Hey, I agree with all about California, I lived in California all my life but I always wanted change, out of the city in the countryside where weren't so many people and traffic, I now live in East Texas, got a small spread with a pond and tonight we're hunting beaver, he moved in last week and he already ate all my saplings around the pond, I miss Cali but I wouldn't go back!!!
This guy is awesome. Not only did he build a catch and a berm (in Florida that’s pretty much all u need + an acre) he’s also shooting subsonic with a suppressor. Safe and considerate!! We need more Americans like him.
My dad taught me a trick for the same setup you've got. If you were to drill a hole in those logs, long bars of rebar would keep it all straight and stable for as long as that structure's in place. You certainly did a great job, and I'm certain it will last you for years. Congrats!
That's a badass lil tractor you got there. Perfect for regular property work. Probably even more than I'd personally need. Sweet range setup. Always good to be safe.
Exactly how I built mine. I have 125 yds out the back door of my shop and a 25 yd berm for pistol shooting. It's a dream come true that was part of my plan when I built my retirement place.
I was watching a video for like 24 minutes, and this guy is just talking and talking them I saw your video and love it . Straight to the point an so.simple
My compliments very nice and well engineered. I have been installing a paper target system and was/am interested in metal targets, so your covered roof seems to be just the answer. Good job.
Sir you are awesome and very responsible, its good to see people now a days caring for others security and treating guns like the harmful yet interesting tools they are and not as toys! I wish I could build a thing like that but sadly I live in the city. you should make a bigger version and show it to us! Cheers from Nicaragua!
WELL DONE SIR!!!!! I'd like to Second the motion which Mr. Thomas put out there. It is Extremely commendable of you to think about your neighbors. May the Good Karma Gods smile upon you for ever!
yeah after the first bit of talking everyone might want to cut the volume down cause its loud with the tractor all of a sudden and then the chainsaw LOL
I miss having property out in the sticks. Hopefully our country can bounce back and we can start chasing that dream again. We have basically the same setup at work next to the airstrip and it's better than nothing. The other berm is a cross the airstrip built into the hill in a cornfield.
I’m curious as to why you didn’t stack the railroad ties like a log cabin so the sides would’ve been locked into the back? Those side walls don’t see very sturdy.
Thanks for great idea. I will be interlocking those railroad ties in my case. Or just picking up 6x6 PT lumber for my range. Also, I intend to dug out a 10 foot deep area lane so that no pedestrian traffic could be inline. Thanks
Nice! I had to build a shooting range all of the Farms selling out turning into subdivisions around me. I had to laugh at the comment in a good way about friends helping. I have a lot of friends as long as the ammo don't run out haha. When it comes to working is rare to be able to find one of your friends then. Great job and love your tractor. A road crew needed to get rid of dirt and I added 853 dump truck loads the funny thing is nice range but there nothing you can do about old age haha. Enjoyed your video thanks!
Made a similar backstop but used crosswise on sides and top, the rear being dirt. Also added some dirt around the sides and on the top. The main idea being to keep all fired rounds in the target bunker. Great job.
lookin good from Texas , Nice little back stop. If you are any were near Graceland ,Elvis has his own small back yard gun range and it looks like yours.
Good job, Jim! I don't mind work. I can sit around and watch it all day. Yesterday, 12/16/15, while changing spark plugs on my old truck, I kept hearing bullets ricocheting around in the woods next to my place! Strange because I didn't hear shots. I'm on 9 acres. Whew, kindly scared me mule.
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Well done! I've gettin materials together to do one myself. It may be overkill but I'm gonna drill the cross ties and run rebar through em. Looks like you'll enjoy alot of shooting with your set-up
you never know where a bullet will go so always good to have a back stop even if your closest neighbor is 500 yards through woods all it takes is the stars to all line up one day and that bullet to miss every tree and tree branch
Nice build!! I have been planning something similar. I bolted two railroad ties together so one will be planted 3 feet into the ground and will hold the one bolted to it vertical. I will have three posts set up like this This way I can run ties horizontally between them and nail them in. Then pile horse manure behind. Also I was thinking of sides to stop any ricochet bullets. Again nice build!!
Nice job, gives me a couple of good ideas. Loved when you brought out the hand saw then switched for the chainsaw . thanks for being a responsible gun owner 👍 👍 🇨🇦
Real railroad ties are HEAVY! When I was younger my dad got some that came off the Ben Franklin bridge. We built a retaining wall 3 courses high. I am big and strong but holy crap.
I think you should have done interlocking technique where side pieces are locked into the back pieces alternating which will make it more stable (Just an idea maybe for the future). Regardless it looks really good and bravo for that hard work.
I agree, but I already had some short railroad ties that I needed to use so I didn't have the length needed to interlock them... but you are right, interlocking would have been better.
Nice setup. I think it would be a better set up to anchor the cross ties together with drilled holes and rebar as already suggested, then back filling with your bucket loader the clay dirt around all three sides up to roof top level or higher at the rear. Thanks for the video. Happy shooting!
I wanna do something like this. I’m wanting to get about 5-6 tons of dirt to fill the inside of my ties tho. Also am wondering if rebar is an absolutely necessary part of the build? Will the railroad ties be enough filled with dirt
That much weight/pressure on the inside pushing out against the ties would likely necessitate the ties be interlocked like a log cabin and perhaps also staked in place with rebar or T-post.
Well done.Thank you.. As an aside, if your front end bucket were filled with gravel/dirt/something heavy, could it be used to push those fence posts into the ground instead of having to hammer them?
Sadly, I needed the clay to build up my driveway, so the whole thing has now been dismantled... but hopefully I can rebuild it someday, and when I do, I will interlock the corners and back-fill the ties with a clay berm.
I'm glad you pointed out they were subsonic. I was gonna comment, asking how the heck you got those shots so quiet. Even with the suppressor, normal bullets shouldn't be that quiet.
Yeah, the .22 sub sonic is the only true "near silent"firearm I own. My 300 Blackout with subsonic rounds sounds more like a .22 short being discharged with out any suppressor.
How much property you got? Atm I'm renting and have just shy of an acre. What's amount of acre is a good enough amount to shoot on w/o a back stop and what is a good amount if you have a back stop?
It's not so much about the size of the land since the average .22LR bullet can travel a mile in just under three seconds, so significant effort is required to stop that much energy in a very short amount of time. Most states have a law that says it's illegal for a bullet to cross a property line and most cities have a law against discharge of firearm inside city limits. If you are in the middle of nowhere without any neighbors for miles around then your liability would be pretty low in the event that a bullet ricocheted. But the closer other people and their property are to a firearm discharge the greater the shooters potential responsibility / liability. You might want to ask your landlord if it is OK for you to shoot on their property since doing so might be a violation of your lease agreement.
Over time the woods going to fail buddy but a easy way of keeping the rounds on your property would be to push your dirt up to the wood and that way if a round goes through the wood it's not going to tumble up into anyone else. I'd ask your trucker friend to drop off a few more loads of dirt then pack in behind your range.
Great video... I may have interlaced the r/r ties as I built up the walls- but ya tied the top together. What's the gun set up...? I was thinking the 10/22..+ optic?
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I have my own berm as well but I'm having issues with it caving in a little at a time. I was thinking about getting old tires and filling them with dirt. Do you have anything to suggest?
I’d want the dirt inside the railroad ties, you could easily get ricochets back at you off the hard wood, especially as bullets get deposited into them.
I've got 0.8 acre lot. My next door neighbor & neighbor behind me both have about 4+ acre lots. Would I be within my legal right to shoot in my yard with a proper backstop? I live in Tennessee & I don't know where to find out. Don't want a fine or any misdemeanor.
‘’I don’t miss very often , but if I do it ain’t leaving my property” now that’s a responsible gun owner.
Daniel Dumbarton well said
and a conscientious one, too. suppressing a .22 is about as neighborly as you can get.
I was thinking the same thing!.... Taking it seriously helps to protect all of us.... This guy is great!
@@motoz30 i just took the 10/22 out to sight it, I have logs stacked between trees to make a wall,
I plan on making another stack behind it, but with the logs 90'ed , (*ive heard some rounds tumble thru) *neighbors are 200yards away
InstaBlaster
Perfect all I need is a truck, tractor, a bunch or rail road ties and a big ass backyard. #jealous
Boy just try living in California, were practically serfs and every city in this state is an absolute shithole. *Except Bishop
faultroy I got out finally, moved over to Nevada. It has much of the beauty you would expect in California, without the ever incipient government (for now). I agree that in the 70's and earlier, California truly seem to be a magical place.
Hey, I agree with all about California, I lived in California all my life but I always wanted change, out of the city in the countryside where weren't so many people and traffic, I now live in East Texas, got a small spread with a pond and tonight we're hunting beaver, he moved in last week and he already ate all my saplings around the pond, I miss Cali but I wouldn't go back!!!
Ah the American dream
@faultroy It wasn't any better when the Republicans ran it. The voters are the problem with the gun laws
This guy is awesome. Not only did he build a catch and a berm (in Florida that’s pretty much all u need + an acre) he’s also shooting subsonic with a suppressor. Safe and considerate!! We need more Americans like him.
I like that you even added overhead ties as well. Thanks for the video!
My dad taught me a trick for the same setup you've got. If you were to drill a hole in those logs, long bars of rebar would keep it all straight and stable for as long as that structure's in place. You certainly did a great job, and I'm certain it will last you for years. Congrats!
Much respect for your sense of shooting responsibility and safety. Nice job on the range!
That's a badass lil tractor you got there. Perfect for regular property work. Probably even more than I'd personally need. Sweet range setup. Always good to be safe.
Thanks John !
Exactly how I built mine. I have 125 yds out the back door of my shop and a 25 yd berm for pistol shooting. It's a dream come true that was part of my plan when I built my retirement place.
Love the engineering Sir. Wish more people were like this. You need something, you build it. Hard work. That's how America was made. Bravo Sir.
Best video I’ve come across for building a range! Others just want to talk about how much they know about guns!!
Like the railroad ties !! Smart choice for backstop, dense with tar coating. Got one just like it and it works just fine.
Man, that is a perfect set up for what most of us are trying to achieve. Thanks for the video.
This is a strong guy who is quite thorough. Most impressive.
I was watching a video for like 24 minutes, and this guy is just talking and talking them I saw your video and love it
. Straight to the point an so.simple
Thanks for the video brother, and a good job and great thinking for the respect and care you show your neighbors !
That's a great build! Those railroad ties are pretty hefty, even for a young man. Thank you for the video.
My back hurt watching all that work. That's dedication! Awesome
Thanks David !
Man, you take safety seriously plus no bang! Perfect neighbor
With that tractor and chainsaw you can build anything!
Good job!
Nice Job on the back yard range!! It’s bad ass!!
My compliments very nice and well engineered. I have been installing a paper target system and was/am interested in metal targets, so your covered roof seems to be just the answer. Good job.
this is the lodge down the road, do you know where all the railroad ties that were around the 6 horseshoe pits went ?
i love how easy the plans are in *WoodBlueprints. Com* to understand and the step-by-step videos they have. Makes getting material really easy
Nice work there Captain! Yeah all those bullets got to go somewhere and shooting ranges get expensive when you like to shoot a lot. Nice work.
Sir you are awesome and very responsible, its good to see people now a days caring for others security and treating guns like the harmful yet interesting tools they are and not as toys! I wish I could build a thing like that but sadly I live in the city. you should make a bigger version and show it to us! Cheers from Nicaragua!
Thanx for the video! You realy worked hard on building that range!!
The effort you put in...man!!
Admiration!!👍👍
WELL DONE SIR!!!!! I'd like to Second the motion which Mr. Thomas put out there. It is Extremely commendable of you to think about your neighbors. May the Good Karma Gods smile upon you for ever!
I like that. Been planning to build a little pellet trap / shooting gallery for the kids to practice with their air rifles in the back yard.
"Now i'm gonna measure the-" NNNRRRRRRRMMMMMMM - 2:36
yeah after the first bit of talking everyone might want to cut the volume down cause its loud with the tractor all of a sudden and then the chainsaw LOL
😂😂
Nice riggings you built there. Good stroke of fortune with the loads of clay. If the crossties rot eventually, that berm will catch them regardless.
I miss having property out in the sticks. Hopefully our country can bounce back and we can start chasing that dream again.
We have basically the same setup at work next to the airstrip and it's better than nothing. The other berm is a cross the airstrip built into the hill in a cornfield.
Much respect for doing things correctly & yea, wish I had the land, equipment & outright gumption to build such a set up.
Nice piece of work Jim and that little tractor looked sweet. Those old 22LRs do like to richochet of just about anything.
I’m curious as to why you didn’t stack the railroad ties like a log cabin so the sides would’ve been locked into the back? Those side walls don’t see very sturdy.
cmiller88581 I like your idea. And I’d flare the sides out about 25-30 degrees to make a wider background
Because he's not building a cabin!
@@johneratcliff Anything worth doing is worth doing right the first time.
@@johneratcliff my thought exactly lol. Its for catching bullets, not shut eye 👍
Thanks for great idea. I will be interlocking those railroad ties in my case. Or just picking up 6x6 PT lumber for my range. Also, I intend to dug out a 10 foot deep area lane so that no pedestrian traffic could be inline. Thanks
Thank you! I just bought a home in El Cajon, Calif. on an acre. Can't wait to build one like this in the Spring.
Hahaha good joke!! Shooting a gun in California hahahahahahaha
@@zackedwards7803 lived in Northern Cali for years and we had a range on our property. Sounds like you don't know what you're talking about.
I like this guy.. smart words at the end :)
Nice! I had to build a shooting range all of the Farms selling out turning into subdivisions around me. I had to laugh at the comment in a good way about friends helping. I have a lot of friends as long as the ammo don't run out haha. When it comes to working is rare to be able to find one of your friends then. Great job and love your tractor. A road crew needed to get rid of dirt and I added 853 dump truck loads the funny thing is nice range but there nothing you can do about old age haha. Enjoyed your video thanks!
Nice setup. Thanks for sharing.
Made a similar backstop but used crosswise on sides and top, the rear being dirt. Also added some dirt around the sides and on the top. The main idea being to keep all fired rounds in the target bunker. Great job.
Outstanding work sir, this is to be truely appreciated. Best regards and respects
Great idea and very well done. Congrats!
lookin good from Texas , Nice little back stop. If you are any were near Graceland ,Elvis has his own small back yard gun range and it looks like yours.
You worked very hard for that....enjoy it
Really nice video and range, man!! Great job.
I'm a little jealous. Great work!
Good job, Jim! I don't mind work. I can sit around and watch it all day.
Yesterday, 12/16/15, while changing spark plugs on my old truck, I kept hearing bullets ricocheting around in the woods next to my place! Strange because I didn't hear shots. I'm on 9 acres. Whew, kindly scared me mule.
I like the set up. Need to do that here.
Very nice I've been working on one myself I'm definitely taking a few of your ideas and putting into my plans.
I am not in the construction industry nor am I a carpenter, I wanted a good guide to help with small projects such as small sheds and some remodeling around the house. So there’s a magic which is Shed Plan [ visit here *WoodBlueprints. Com* ]. This Shed Plan covers all my instructions from top to bottom in a step by step manner.
Well done! I've gettin materials together to do one myself. It may be overkill but I'm gonna drill the cross ties and run rebar through em. Looks like you'll enjoy alot of shooting with your set-up
If I was his neighbor, I'd thank him for being safety minded.
you never know where a bullet will go so always good to have a back stop even if your closest neighbor is 500 yards through woods all it takes is the stars to all line up one day and that bullet to miss every tree and tree branch
Love this. Hard work and responsibility. Pretty much the American way.
I just wanted to say... GOOD JOB!!! I know it was not easy to construct that yourself but well done.
Thanks !
This was very satisfying to watch
Nice build!! I have been planning something similar. I bolted two railroad ties together so one will be planted 3 feet into the ground and will hold the one bolted to it vertical. I will have three posts set up like this This way I can run ties horizontally between them and nail them in. Then pile horse manure behind. Also I was thinking of sides to stop any ricochet bullets. Again nice build!!
Nice job, gives me a couple of good ideas. Loved when you brought out the hand saw then switched for the chainsaw . thanks for being a responsible gun owner 👍 👍 🇨🇦
Nice setup
Real railroad ties are HEAVY! When I was younger my dad got some that came off the Ben Franklin bridge. We built a retaining wall 3 courses high. I am big and strong but holy crap.
I think you should have done interlocking technique where side pieces are locked into the back pieces alternating which will make it more stable (Just an idea maybe for the future). Regardless it looks really good and bravo for that hard work.
I agree, but I already had some short railroad ties that I needed to use so I didn't have the length needed to interlock them... but you are right, interlocking would have been better.
Looks nice man. I love bein able to shoot outside.
Now that's a backstop, great job.
Nice setup. I think it would be a better set up to anchor the cross ties together with drilled holes and rebar as already suggested, then back filling with your bucket loader the clay dirt around all three sides up to roof top level or higher at the rear. Thanks for the video. Happy shooting!
All good suggestions. Thanks for your comments !
Good video lots of information in a short concise presentation.
I have a big backyard but I don't have a tractor. So I have to do everything by hand. Pure manpower.
Can you tell me what kind of target that is? I love how it resets when you shoot it
It is called a Dueling Tree made with AR 500 steel. They are a bit pricy but near indestructible. You should be able to find them thru Google search.
Nice project thanks for sharing 👍🏾👍🏾
Nice! Looks great.
Nice set-up. To make it even better......maybe interlock the three walls, drill holes, add rebar.
I wanna do something like this. I’m wanting to get about 5-6 tons of dirt to fill the inside of my ties tho. Also am wondering if rebar is an absolutely necessary part of the build? Will the railroad ties be enough filled with dirt
That much weight/pressure on the inside pushing out against the ties would likely necessitate the ties be interlocked like a log cabin and perhaps also staked in place with rebar or T-post.
Well done.Thank you.. As an aside, if your front end bucket were filled with gravel/dirt/something heavy, could it be used to push those fence posts into the ground instead of having to hammer them?
I have heard of people being able to push them into the ground, but when I tried it, I just bent the heck outta the T-post.
Thanks. I can see that.
Very nice. But Jim. You gotta get some friends so you don't have to work so hard! Offer free beer. :)
TheGoatMumbler that John deer is more useful than all my drunk friends put together
safety first Jim. thought the berm of clay was enough then your cool wood backstop came up. gives me good ideas. thanks.
Very nice. I hope you eventually back filled the ties with that dirt.
Sadly, I needed the clay to build up my driveway, so the whole thing has now been dismantled... but hopefully I can rebuild it someday, and when I do, I will interlock the corners and back-fill the ties with a clay berm.
That's an awesome set up.
Very nice setup Sir! I'm sure your neighbors Thank you!
Awesome job. Great idea and super safe. Rick
Thanks Beverly !
how is holding up?
Being friendly pays off sometimes nice setup
Work smarter not harder! Good stuff!
nice set up i cant wait to get mine set up
I'm glad you pointed out they were subsonic. I was gonna comment, asking how the heck you got those shots so quiet. Even with the suppressor, normal bullets shouldn't be that quiet.
Yeah, the .22 sub sonic is the only true "near silent"firearm I own. My 300 Blackout with subsonic rounds sounds more like a .22 short being discharged with out any suppressor.
How much property you got?
Atm I'm renting and have just shy of an acre. What's amount of acre is a good enough amount to shoot on w/o a back stop and what is a good amount if you have a back stop?
It's not so much about the size of the land since the average .22LR bullet can travel a mile in just under three seconds, so significant effort is required to stop that much energy in a very short amount of time. Most states have a law that says it's illegal for a bullet to cross a property line and most cities have a law against discharge of firearm inside city limits. If you are in the middle of nowhere without any neighbors for miles around then your liability would be pretty low in the event that a bullet ricocheted. But the closer other people and their property are to a firearm discharge the greater the shooters potential responsibility / liability. You might want to ask your landlord if it is OK for you to shoot on their property since doing so might be a violation of your lease agreement.
That’s a nice setup right there
WOW those are the biggest Lincoln Logs I have ever seen.
you did a real good job keep up the good work.
Over time the woods going to fail buddy but a easy way of keeping the rounds on your property would be to push your dirt up to the wood and that way if a round goes through the wood it's not going to tumble up into anyone else.
I'd ask your trucker friend to drop off a few more loads of dirt then pack in behind your range.
Next time you build a back stop you should over lap your lumber to make sure everything won't be so tipsy. Kinda like log cabins are built.
Nice job and I'm sure you enjoyed doing it, but........the earth wall that is already behind the new structure would have been enough, would it not?
Great video...
I may have interlaced the r/r ties as I built up the walls- but ya tied the top together. What's the gun set up...? I was thinking the 10/22..+ optic?
What caliber and model suppressor are you using ? Good video.
.22LR with AAC Element II suppressor.
@@JimThomasOutdoors Ahhh... CMMG .22 long rifle conversion kit. Subs ?
@@ignisfatuuz That is a good guess, but it is actually a Smith & Wesson M&P 15-22 with GemTec subsonic ammo.
Nice video some really good tips, thanks Jim!
I would think that either the dirt pile OR the railroad ties would be sufficient, not both. But, great job at being extra safe! 👍👍
Making the video would have warn me out. Really good job. I hope it's all still working for you. Thank you.
+MeatTheBible Thanks, and yes it was a good bit of work :-P
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Is that a .22 bcg? And what suppresor? Quiet as the wind!
The rifle is Smith and Wesson M&P 15/22. The suppressor is AAC Element II. The ammo is Gemtech Subsonic.
I want to turn my backyard into a shooting range, but there are houses in the far back. Do you think my neighbors will care?
Where do you get railroad ties?
Nicely done!! Thanks for sharing..
I have my own berm as well but I'm having issues with it caving in a little at a time. I was thinking about getting old tires and filling them with dirt. Do you have anything to suggest?
I’d want the dirt inside the railroad ties, you could easily get ricochets back at you off the hard wood, especially as bullets get deposited into them.
I've got 0.8 acre lot. My next door neighbor & neighbor behind me both have about 4+ acre lots. Would I be within my legal right to shoot in my yard with a proper backstop? I live in Tennessee & I don't know where to find out. Don't want a fine or any misdemeanor.