How do modern gunsmiths/gun designers/barrel makers figure out the minimum thickness a barrel needs to have ? Just one of those questions that's always been in the back of my mind but never bothered to ask.... How did they used to do it in the old days, before the days of modern alloys, advanced metallurgy etc... ? Was it simply a matter of loading up a charge, attach a long string to the trigger, go hide behind a tree or other solid object, pull string, if the gun doesn't blow up you're good to go ?
Seems that anything from brass to cast iron to damascus steel to stainless steel to carbon fiber to whatever is/has been used to make a barrel at one point or another... There must be <some> manner of crunching the numbers out there to figure out what a *safe minimum" is.
Seems that anything from brass to cast iron to damascus steel to stainless steel to carbon fiber to whatever is/has been used to make a barrel at one point or another... There must be <some> manner of crunching the numbers out there to figure out what a *safe minimum" is.