1shotwonder
Member
- Location
- Northwestern Ontario
What is considered to be maximum ROT in a varmint barrel firing this weight of projectile?
What is considered to be maximum ROT in a varmint barrel firing this weight of projectile?
I think bullet quality comes into play. Cheap plated campros at 3100fps+ out of a 1-7" twist are not long for this world. Jacketed stuff can be loaded accurately though. 1-9" seems to like everything from 40gr up to around 70 in my experience.
Running light bullets in fast twist at high velocity can easily result in centrifugal force exploding the bullet before it reaches the target. Just under the ragged edge of rotational self destruction lies a sweet spot in terminal performance though, even if not for accuracy.
But... to answer the OPs question, it depends how fast you want to push the bullet. You can run 40 grain bullets in a 1:7 if they are running slow enough MV.
As for accuracy.... Technically the bullet weight is not the reason light bullets are less accurate in a fast twist barrel. It's just that bullet imperfections are exaggerated at high spin rate.... Think of it like a tire that's out of balance... At slow speeds the tire seems fine, but drive faster and you begin to feel the effect of the imbalance. With a bullet, the imbalance relates to poor accuracy.
Just as you would probably not want to put snow tires on a Ferrari, you would not ideally be using light bullets in a fast twist barrel... even if you "can"
Heavy bullets in a fast twist is like race tires on a race car. Light bullets in a slow twist are a short range combination that neuters the long range performance of the rifle, but is the traditional (cheap to manufacture) solution to short range accuracy.
You might want to look up gyroscopic stability calculators on Google. You'll see the stability is relative to spin rate, velocity and bullet length.
Spin the bullet faster than required can degrade accuracy, but not always. In my experience a slightly over spun high BC bullet seems to be more consistent in switchy winds at long range. The counter point is that a slightly under spun high BC bullet tends to be more accurate in light winds.
Hmmm….
Interesting perspective Boomer… but let’s roll this around a bit…
You broadly claim that it’s categorically untrue that spinning a light bullet too fast can easily result in bullet failure and that in fact it is actually caused by poorly constructed bullets?
Interesting…
So by your logic, a light bullet that shoots fine from a 1:14 twist barrel but explodes before it goes 100 yards from a 1:7 twist barrel is not actually caused by the fast twist and velocity, but is actually the fault of the bullets???….. Hmmm I’m struggling with this one.
The bullet in this example was fine from a 1:14 but fails from a 1:7…. But the 1:7 works great when used with heavy bullets.
Still struggling with your logic.
You don’t “get” my “tire analogy”…. Well first of all it’s an “analogy” and not a “thesis” on ballistic flight.
What I’m attempting to illustrate is that spinning a poor quality bullet no faster than required to attain gyroscopic stability is where that grade of bullet will perform as well as that grade of bullet can… Spinning such a bullet faster than the minimum will only serve to antagonize the accuracy performance.
Conversely a high grade match bullet can be spinning faster than the minimum required to attain gyroscopic stability and still produce reasonably good groups, but there is always a point that is ideal. Over spinning even a good bullet is not the best way to maximize the accuracy potential of that bullet.
The reality of this is not exactly cutting edge news. It’s quite factual that light/short bullets produce best groups when fired from a slow twist barrel and that heavy/long bullets produce poor accuracy from a slow twist and best accuracy from a fast twist barrel.
So.. no… it’s not a tire, but I thought some of the readers (Boomer exempted) might grasp the parallelism here.
My experience in blowing up bullets is the Sierra 80 Match King. Not exactly a light varmint bullet.
My 22-250 Ackley could launch them as fast as 3400fps. But at that velocity some would blow up.
My suggestion to the OP is that if there is no intention of shooting heavy bullets, a 1:9 or 1:12 would be the best bet. Personally I would use 1:9, to keep the door open for some heavier bullets.