"I even wrote a program to propagate the trajectories and calculate about where the downrange point of convergence would be." -Bryan Litz
Kind of a strange reply in my eyes, actually. He says he's got an old Enfield that seems to exhibit positive compensation due to an entirely different mechanism, which he thinks is the entire rifle flexing due to recoil. And says he's open to the idea of weights on a barrel influencing positive compensation. But then for some reason says he doesn't think modern rifles could do what the Enfield does because the modern ones are too stiff. Yeah, ok, but I didn't say anything about comparing modern bench guns to old service rifles, either, hehe. Anyway, he says positive compensation is hard to argue against, and now says convergence is not only a thing but he's written a program to estimate where it is happening in the case he was testing. Sorry, Glenn.
"Clayton,
Thanks for the question.
In my published work on tuners so far, I haven’t tested for positive compensation, or ‘convergence’. My tests were all only at 100 yards, which is too close to study convergence for centerfire rifles. My test was only looking at the claims of increased precision at 100 yards that tuners are supposed to produce. I was testing to see if the ‘smallest group setting’ on the tuner was repeatable, and found that it was not. It’s a case where a shooter can follow the instructions, and arrive at a ‘best’ tuner setting, but if the test is repeated, a different ‘best’ setting is found. My intent is to explain how this means the tuner ‘isn’t working’, especially when compared to groups fired from the same rifle before the tuner was installed, and seeing the same precision.
Having said all that, convergence, aka positive compensation is a different thing. The concept of it is hard to argue, and there is historical precedent with the Lee Enfield rifle. I actually purchased an original Mk4 Lee Enfield rifle, along with original ammo (containing cordite), and fired many groups at 300 yards, on a Shot Marker, with radar. Even at 300 yards, I was able to detect a slight bias towards positive compensation with that rifle. Positive compensation being defined as the shots dispersing less in vertical than their MV and BC would suggest. I even wrote a program to propagate the trajectories and calculate about where the downrange point of convergence would be. So I’ve seen and measured positive compensation, but still question if any barrel ‘harmonics’ are involved.
From my perspective of looking at that Lee Enfield rifle… It’s barrel isn’t free floated, it’s captured by the stock by several bands including up to about an inch from the muzzle. What I noticed from shooting that (relatively light weight) rifle a lot with very old ammo (which had incredibly high ES in MV), is that I swear I could tell from the recoil which shots were ‘faster’ and which were ‘slower’, even if it was only the extreme outliers I was detecting. This makes me question; if I can feel the difference in recoil between the fast vs. slow shots, certainly the gun is ‘feeling’ this also as a strain proportional to the variable stress. I picture a scenario in which, upon firing, the recoil ‘bends’ the barreled action slightly in the shape of a rainbow/leaf spring. Higher recoiling (higher MV) shots do this more, and hunch the muzzle into a down-angle more, than lower recoiling (slower) shots. I think this is a reasonable mechanism to explain the positive compensation I see with that rifle, as opposed to a theory of barrel ‘harmonics’, considering it’s a captured barrel.
In summary, I am open to positive compensation as a mechanism that barrel weights could perhaps influence, in general. However, I believe that modern rifles with stiff actions, and floated bull barrels simply don’t have the same mechanism as the Lee Enfield to manifest variations in recoil energy into variations in muzzle pointing, at least not to a magnitude that’s detectable within the rifles’ precision.
Take care,
-Bryan"
I guess some people can change their views when coming across new evidence.