wayupnorth
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Northern Alberta
one of my kids is doing a course via distance ED to get a couple extra credits and the course they picked up was a forensic's course.
(kinda wish they had those when i was in school - looks neat!)
so i was walking by and she asked me a question.....
which gun has more kinetic energy, a revolver or a pistol?
i stop, look at her and say.... a revolver is a pistol.
she shows me her module and it shows a 'pistol' as a semi auto pistol.
so im like.... errrr ok.
ill let that pass i guess, seems like a silly mistake.
so then she says, never mind, i found the answer in the readings, the semi auto has more kinetic energy.
i was surprised by that.
my thinking was the revolver would have more because the semi auto uses some of the gases to do its blow back where the revolver does not.
but the reading module states that revolvers are inherently bad because they lose pressure in the gap between the cylinder and the barrel.
im sitting here thinking about that and i dont know... it seems wrong.
really, at the end of the day the question is what is wrong, caliber should have been what they asked.
but it does bring up a interesting question.
if you shoot the same lets say 9mm load from a semi auto and a revolver which one will have higher velocity (which should then have higher kinetic energy i would think).
Friday night fun with math!
(kinda wish they had those when i was in school - looks neat!)
so i was walking by and she asked me a question.....
which gun has more kinetic energy, a revolver or a pistol?
i stop, look at her and say.... a revolver is a pistol.
she shows me her module and it shows a 'pistol' as a semi auto pistol.
so im like.... errrr ok.
ill let that pass i guess, seems like a silly mistake.
so then she says, never mind, i found the answer in the readings, the semi auto has more kinetic energy.
i was surprised by that.
my thinking was the revolver would have more because the semi auto uses some of the gases to do its blow back where the revolver does not.
but the reading module states that revolvers are inherently bad because they lose pressure in the gap between the cylinder and the barrel.
im sitting here thinking about that and i dont know... it seems wrong.
really, at the end of the day the question is what is wrong, caliber should have been what they asked.
but it does bring up a interesting question.
if you shoot the same lets say 9mm load from a semi auto and a revolver which one will have higher velocity (which should then have higher kinetic energy i would think).
Friday night fun with math!


















































