High speed ballistic pictures

nice pics dude! you should post these over at pistol-forum.com just make sure to include as many pics as you can and your descriptions in your posts, not just links back to your site. Otherwise the mods will think you are just spamming for hits. (guys do it with their blogs and youtube pages all the time)

You're right. I propably need to include more info in posts. Problem though is that pictures are so big and I have such huge amount of data :) Actually I have so much unprocessed stuff left that it would last couple of weeks with daily posts but it would look like spamming so I try to focus in best parts. I have serious problem with resources. My pay job takes so much time and there is hardly anything left after it and family needs. But so it goes..

More stuff is coming soon though and I have great plans for future tests so stay tuned :)
 
posting links to pics is cool so long as you don't just ask guys to come to your site to look at them. Your posts here are awesome, and would fit perfectly over at PF too. I've just seen a bunch of guys spam lately on a bunch of different forums and didn't want someone to misinterpret what you're doing and then have people miss out on your pics. Cuz they are awesome dude.
 
Here is brake picture for AR-15 enthusiasts:

AR-15_FINAL_4_800.jpg

Plan was to illustrate brake function and I guess it worked well. Look how little there is gas following that bullet and how much it has been directed to both sides. It reminds me more of those .22lr silencer pictures rather than even unsilenced .22lr.
 
More bullets incoming ;)
Have you guys seen movie Snatch? Vinnie Jones is playing Bullet-Tooth Tony and he doesn't like replicas but instead....
 
One thing I don't understand about this… I see the pictures and they're awesome, don't get me wrong, but I don't understand how the physics work - that a bullet going so fast leaving the barrel can yaw so much, so very close to exiting the barrel ...it's just hard to understand how that can happen, not that I don't believe it. The base of that bullet must be pushing very hard to one side of the barrel upon exit… right? I just love science! LOL
thanks for the pictures, awesome!
 
Dude, these photos have a permanent rotation on my desktop background at work. Keep up the good work. It would be interesting to have someone give a thorough explanation on the yaw in the photos. What is it that is imparting it on the projectile? Is it the twist rate of the barrels causing the projectiles to come out too fast? Too slow? How do they eventually stabilize in flight?
 
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