Barrel Length Studies in 5.56mm NATO Weapons

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The maximum velocity for the M855 projectile occurred in a 20-inch barrel. This is anticipated since the cartridge was designed specifically for this barrel length. Velocity drops rapidly as the barrel length decreases, especially below 10 inches where the velocity drops below 2,500 fps. M855 bullets traveling below 2,500 fps when impacting a target will not produce a lethal wound channel.

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Five-round average pressure in the bore at the moment of bullet uncorking is plotted against barrel length. It is apparent that the pressure rises exponentially with decreasing barrel length. This rapidly increasing pressure produces significantly higher sound levels as well as flash and strain on suppressor design. The values for 10.5 and 14.5 inches were calculated by averaging the adjacent measurements.


Here's an interesting article on barrel length and how it effects our short barrel AR ballistics.

http://sadefensejournal.com/wp/?p=1093

Conclusion
To satisfy the curiosity of the authors about the effects of barrel length in the 5.56×45 NATO weapons, an experiment was crafted to measure actual bore pressure in the barrel at the moment of projectile exit, velocity, and sound pressure level with a barrel length varying between 24 and 5 inches. This has practicality on multiple levels.

When considering sound suppression of this cartridge, a suppressor has to be designed to handle the pressure of the gases presented at the instant of bullet exit, and higher uncorking pressures necessitate a larger suppressor to handle the gas load presented. In separate studies, the authors have noted that the pressure gradient is not uniform throughout the entrance chamber of a suppressor due to the forward motion of the gases. This indicates that a larger volume entrance chamber needs to rely on increased length rather than diameter. With higher uncorking pressures, there is also increased erosion of the suppressor’s blast baffle from the superheated, partially burned powder particles functioning like a plasma torch. Further, increasing diameter necessitates heavier walls to keep from increasing hoop stress (and decreasing safety factor) with the additional result of a physically heavier suppressor. To attempt to preserve sound reduction performance, a suppressor will need to be longer (and heavier) with a shorter barrel, negating most of the compactness gained by barrel shortening.

Secondly, with shorter barrels, tuning of the gas port for weapon cycling becomes far more critical. Adding a suppressor, which does slightly increase bore pressure, will result in more erratic and forceful cycling of the weapon leading to earlier weapon failure. It is necessary to remember that the 5.56×45 NATO cartridge was designed specifically for a 20-inch barrel on a gas operated weapon with 7 inches of dwell time after the gas port. The 14.5-inch M4 barrel retains the 7 inch dwell length after the gas port.

Lastly, decreased velocity with barrels much shorter than 14.5 inches have a number of unwanted effects. Lowered linear velocity produces lower rotational velocity, which will result in diminished gyroscopic stability of the bullet. It will also result in significantly decreased projectile kinetic energy, decreased ability to generate a significant wound channel, and will reach a point of diminishing returns where lethality of the projectile definitely comes into question.

Thus, it is the opinion of the authors that barrel lengths less than 14.5” in this caliber introduce effectiveness issues that may be detrimental to the user.





What does everyone think?
 
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Interesting read. I've got a 16 and 14.5 and am looking at an 7.5. As a recreational user with a range only gun it really won't have much effect on punching holes in paper or smacking steel. That being said its still cool to understand what's going on in there at each trigger pull.
 
Maybe, but if I am reading the chart correctly there is VERY little practical difference in velocity between a 10.5" and the 14.5" barrel lengths. Interesting all the same.
 
The article is only about the current 5.56 NATO FMJ ammo which relies on tumbling and fragmentation inside the target to be effective and needs 2500 ft/second velocity at impact to do the job.

Because rifles with barrels under 16 inches are treated the same in the US as fully automatic machine guns and suppressors, with special licensing necessary, and so are very rare, there is not much information on civilian uses and soft point or JHP rounds. For example, how does a 10.5 inch rifle do against a wild boar, compared to a 16 inch version using the same hunting ammo.

Any info anyone?
 
Heh heh. I've stated exactly this here; that there are studies showing a max velocity at 20" for 5.56 and took a TONNE of flack for it. Nice to see a little redemption once in awhile.
 
I am curious to know why the velocity takes a dip at 21", only to increase again above that.
Doesn't seem to make sense, unless the 21" barrel they were testing was shooting weaker batch of ammo than the rest.
 
Heh heh. I've stated exactly this here; that there are studies showing a max velocity at 20" for 5.56 and took a TONNE of flack for it. Nice to see a little redemption once in awhile.

The study clearly indicates it was for the M855 round only. Applying the results of that testing clear across the board as a generality is faulty.
Anyone with differing length AR barrels that has spent a bit of time behind the guns with a chrony and with accurate come-ups at distance with differing ammunition will tell you it is nonsense.
 
Recommended ammunition

From:
http://www.223reloads.com/home/223-5-56-info/223-tests-performance/223-ballistics-effectiveness---pt1-of-2

The U.S. M855/Belgian SS109 62gr FMJ boat-tail bullet has a partial steel core surrounded by a copper jacket and a muzzle velocity from a 20" barrel of 3034 f/s. When fired from the 14.5" barrel M-4 carbine it has a muzzle velocity of approximately 2800 to 2900 f/s and when exiting the muzzle of the 10" barrel XM-177/Colt Commando and 8.3" barrel HK53, velocity is generally reduced to below 2500 f/s. Wound severity with this cartridge varies depending on bullet fragmentation. The degree of bullet fragmentation is related to impact velocity. At lower muzzle velocities and as the range to the target increases, the bullet striking velocity is reduced, limiting bullet fragmentation, and decreasing wound severity. Down to a velocity of approximately 2700 f/s, generally around 150 meters from a 20" barrel and 75 to 100 meters from a 14.5 or 16 inch barrel, the bullet enters the tissue, leaving a small punctate entrance wound, and then travels point forward for approximately 4.7". If the bullet leaves tissue at this point, it will leave a small punctate exit wound and will have caused minimal tissue disruption along the wound tract. If it continues to travel in tissue, it will yaw to 90 degrees at this point, flatten, and fracture at the cannelure (the knurled circumferential groove around the middle of the bullet into which the cartridge neck is crimped). The flattened bullet nose remains in one piece and retains 60% of the original bullet weight. The 40% of the bullet behind the cannelure shatters into many fragments that can spread up to 2.75" radially away from the wound tract. These fragment each cut their own path through the surrounding tissue, multiply perforating it. Temporary cavitation then exerts its stretch effects on this weakened tissue, synergistically increasing the permanent cavity by detaching tissue pieces. Wounds in body segments thicker than 4.7" show greatly enlarged permanent and temporary cavities and can create stellate exit wounds of 3.5 to 4.7" measured form the ends opposite the skin splits. At a velocity below 2700 f/s down to 2500 f/s, generally around 150 to 200 meters from a 20" barrel and 100 to 150 meters from a 14.5 or 16 inch barrel, the bullet yaws, breaks at the cannelure into two large pieces, but does not fragment, reducing the wound severity. Below 2500 f/s, generally beyond 200 meters from a 20" barrel, 150 meters from a 14.5 or 16 inch barrel, and at the muzzle of shorter barrels, the bullet remains generally intact and does not fracture or fragment, but does yaw and may exhibit some flattening of the base. This lack of fragmentation significantly decreases wound severity. Depending how early yaw begins, wounds may be similar to those produced by the 5.45 x 39 mm Russian M74 53 gr FMJ bullet. If the bullet passes through tissue before yawing, small punctate entrance and exit wounds with little intervening tissue disruption will result. If the bullet yaws while traveling through tissue, the permanent cavity will be enlarged and disruption of those inelastic tissues susceptible to the stretch of temporary cavitation will be greatly enhanced. A small punctate entrance wound will be present and the exit wound may be punctate, oblong, or stellate depending on the bullet yaw angle on exit. M855 can produce insignificant wounds, similar to those produced by .22 long rifle if the bullets do not fragment or yaw. This can be caused by velocities below approximately 2500 f/s as when fired from short barrel weapons, when the range increases beyond 150 yards, or if the bullets pass through only minimal tissue, such as a limb or the chest of a thin, malnourished individual--when this occurs, the bullet exits the body before it has a chance to yaw and fragment at the cannelure. Performance of the older 55 gr M193 FMJ is nearly identical to the M855 discussed above.

In testing, the 55 gr M193 style FMJ exhibits minimal fragmentation and deformation after first passing through an interior wall. Strangely, the Winchester 62 gr M855 FMJ (RA556M855) “green tip” had exactly the opposite performance when first hitting an interior wall; it exhibits significant early fragmentation, with only the steel core tip penetrating beyond 19 cm. The lack of fragmentation by the 55 gr M193 FMJ when penetrating interior walls make it a poor choice when decreased penetration is desired during entry or urban operations. Both M193 and M855 offer poor performance after penetrating automobile windows, as they tend to disintegrate into small fragments which give insufficient penetration.

Acceptable performing 5.56 mm/.223 ammunition choices for law enforcement duty in 1 in 9" or faster twist barrels are noted below:

Black Hills 60 gr JSP
Winchester M-855 62 gr FMJ (RA556M855)
Federal 62 gr Tac JSP (LE223T3)
Winchester 64 gr JSP (Q3246)
Black Hills 68 gr JHP
Federal 69 gr JHP (223GM)
Winchester 69 gr JHP (S223M)
Black Hills 73 gr JHP
Black Hills 75 gr JHP
Hornady 75 gr TAP (80265)

The ONLY .223 load we shot which offered adequate penetration after shooting through automobile windshields was the Federal 62 gr Tactical (LE223T3). The trade off is that the Federal Tactical does not fragment, maintains the deepest penetration of any .223 bullet after penetrating walls, and as a result, may not be the best choice for entry or urban settings. (The older Federal 55 gr Tactical (LE223T1) for 1/12 twist weapons offers the same type of deep penetration and performance against automobile windows) The other .223 loads listed above which offer good performance for entry or other anti-personnel applications had insufficient penetration and retained mass after shooting through the car windows.

Comments?
 
Ok, stupid question time. A 7-9" barreled AR is "meant" as a PDW which I take as an urban entry/security weapon with ranges from point blank to 20-30 yards max. Would it's balistics not be sufficient for the role it is designed for in this case (PDW weapon)?

I myself am considering building an 8.5" AR after my 14.5" Vltor is complete.
 
Ok, stupid question time. A 7-9" barreled AR is "meant" as a PDW which I take as an urban entry/security weapon with ranges from point blank to 20-30 yards max.

I think you will find that its effective distance is actually quite a bit longer than that. Depending on optics, there is no reason you can't be effective out to 200-300y.
 
Ok, stupid question time. A 7-9" barreled AR is "meant" as a PDW which I take as an urban entry/security weapon with ranges from point blank to 20-30 yards max. Would it's balistics not be sufficient for the role it is designed for in this case (PDW weapon)?

I myself am considering building an 8.5" AR after my 14.5" Vltor is complete.

Not a stupid question at all. That is the point of this thread.

To achieve this sort of damage with a short barreled AR.
M855.jpg

It seems all the information is that heavier hollow point or OTM bullets do the job better in shorter barrels. Think 70 grains or more, in a SMK or TAP type bullet.
 
I think you will find that its effective distance is actually quite a bit longer than that. Depending on optics, there is no reason you can't be effective out to 200-300y.

It will make a .22 hole in something at 300 yards perhaps, but will it be an effective stopper or the equivalent of shooting something with a .22 LR round?
That's the question.

If you are LE or military or hunting with the SBR it makes all the difference in the world.

For us paper punchers it's just an interesting discussion, making owning and shooting the guns a little more fun.
 
It will make a .22 hole in something at 300 yards perhaps, but will it be an effective stopper or the equivalent of shooting something with a .22 LR round?
That's the question.

If you are LE or military or hunting with the SBR it makes all the difference in the world.

For us paper punchers it's just an interesting discussion, making owning and shooting the guns a little more fun.

I wouldn't shrug off a .22 LR hit. Being shot with a 22 LR is extremely fatal if it hits you in the right place. Even out to 200 yards.

Shot placement trumps calibre almost every single time.
 
In the lighter bullet the kinetic energy being in the speed, you are sacrificing a lot between 9 and 15 inch, to much maybe and loosing so much speed must affect accuracy... JP.
 
With all due respect, how does muzzle velocity affect accuracy? I have a number of short barreled rifles ( 7.5-10.5 inches) and they will shoot 1-1.5 inch groups at 100 yds with loads that they like. Not bench rest quality of course, but certainly very comparable to the same loads in a longer same quality barrel.
 
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