It wasn't a joke...You really don't know, and that is another fact. You need to get out Mom's basement, and go shoot gel with your one rifle. It's a much better fit for your "talents"
R.
no end
It wasn't a joke...You really don't know, and that is another fact. You need to get out Mom's basement, and go shoot gel with your one rifle. It's a much better fit for your "talents"
R.
It wasn't a joke...You really don't know, and that is another fact. You need to get out Mom's basement, and go shoot gel with your one rifle. It's a much better fit for your "talents"
R.
no end
A manufacturer willing to get bloody will have to be the first to develop out the right standard of testing and which data points to use. Happy to go work for hornady or whoever will take it on. Gonna need a minute and a lot of gel to figure out what’s the best impact velocity and gel type to show differences, maybe need two impact velocity points to fully show rate of expected change etc. Not saying easy to do, but it’s a door we haven’t opened yet and needs opening. The finished bullet holds the most answers and data points, we just aren’t studying it yet and so we aren’t able to use anything commercially to help shorten these discussions or make our choices based off better info. Heck who’s to say rate of spin at impact won’t be a factor in what happens internally? Once the part gets started numbers or factors I haven’t thought of yet may be discovered along the way?
In the meantime we just go haywire with subjective this and that but we can still visualize perceived outcomes and make our own internal predictions of various bullets at various velocities with the basic but of info we do have to work with.
So another variable to toss into your variable SD, what about rate of twist?
I could be wrong but for example lets use a 30 cal tsx... (I' just picking numbers, nothing calculated).
Same bullet impact speed, but fired from different ROT barrels, I would be lead to believe the faster twist (1 in 10)would expand more/quicker(centrifical force), therefore penetrating less than the same bullet fired from the slower twist(1 in 15)? It would be spinning 1/3 faster....
Yes? No?
It will be disagreed with... but no. At least not enough to matter/measure.
Penetration has more to do with the impact speed, bullet weight, and design. The ideal bullet rpm, based on shape, is for flight stability.
Stay tuned for the long answer...
R.
I get the stability part, but thats why I specifically chose a tsx, would faster rpm and centrifical force not cause the petals to spread more, creating a wider nose?
I would also think a regular cup and core would not react the same as the mono?
I'm also sure this qualifies as overthinking it a bit. LOL. Just for arguments sake.
I get the stability part, but thats why I specifically chose a tsx, would faster rpm and centrifical force not cause the petals to spread more, creating a wider nose?
I would also think a regular cup and core would not react the same as the mono?
I'm also sure this qualifies as overthinking it a bit. LOL. Just for arguments sake.
SD mattered to Bell. He required penetration and required it through a relatively static medium and needed solids.
Bullet construction and impact velocity will be all you need to worry about in this country.
At this point, there is little to no justification for carrying on about it at all. Facts are facts. Spewing nonsense and backing it with opinion and imagination does nothing to contribute...anything. 10 of same bullets pulled from the same media will have the same SD. That doesn't really tell anyone anything that they didn't know when the bullet was in the barrel.
R.
You really need to read about how bullets are developed. Do you really believe that makers don't do exactly what you think you have "discovered" above?
Everything you cited above, has been done for decades. It's why Joel has so many bullets to choose from.
The Gel is standardized... There are already two impact velocities given, Prototypes get shot into gel, and into animals, extensively, and finished bullets studied. The rate of spin is already considered.
You're so anxious to be the KoolAid Man through the wall first... that you're really last. Your imagination gets the best of you... are you now thinking bullets are developed by some dude in a basement squeezing lead into a casing, and the rest is just marketing?
R.
So another variable to toss into your variable SD, what about rate of twist?
I could be wrong but for example lets use a 30 cal tsx... (I' just picking numbers, nothing calculated).
Same bullet impact speed, but fired from different ROT barrels, I would be lead to believe the faster twist (1 in 10)would expand more/quicker(centrifical force), therefore penetrating less than the same bullet fired from the slower twist(1 in 15)? It would be spinning 1/3 faster....
Yes? No?
SD mattered to Bell. He required penetration and required it through a relatively static medium and needed solids.
Bullet construction and impact velocity will be all you need to worry about in this country.
Why? Mark a line on your target, and zero your rifle so that your group is centered on that point. I wouldnt choose 1 inch high, but that's just me. - dan