Will the following twist rate work to stablize
Bullet: 7mm 175 gr. eld-x
Twist. 9.5
Round. 7mm R.E.M. Mag
You need to get these books if you want accurate BC's and what twist rates will work for what bullet .
If you think you are getting accurate BC coefficients from the bullet manufacturers, then have a read of this.
More Inaccurate Specifications of Ballistic Coefficients
The book pictured is written by Bryan Litz
The document you noted references Bryan Litz as a source of knowledge for the basis of the report
If you think you are getting accurate BC coefficients from the bullet manufacturers, then have a read of this.
More Inaccurate Specifications of Ballistic Coefficients
Yes, and the document found that Litz's calculations were not always predictive of actual measured BC's. Litz suggested the bullet yaw caused by firing the bullets out of a light sporter barrel were responsible for the measured discrepancy in BC's. The tests do not confirm that theory. Some have suggested the testing was done to make Litz look bad. I think not. It was more of a knock on the whole industry for publishing optimistic BC's. I didn't do a thorough check, but of the BC's that were found to be off, no correction has been made by manufacturers to their published numbers. I recall there was one that was off by 45% and it has not been corrected.
I only bring it up as a reminder that we cannot take these numbers as the gospel. This was the second of two tests done by the same author. I have not been able to find the first document.
I think the Berger Twist Rate Calculator is credible and Litz is probably responsible for the specifics of it. But, it uses BC, and that may have some error...
There is another calculator on line by Kolbe. He was the former owner of Border Barrels. It is credible as well, but requires more bullet dimensional data as a basis of input. Berger is one of the few companies that provides something close to a full disclosure of those dimensions.
Yes, and the document found that Litz's calculations were not always predictive of actual measured BC's. Litz suggested the bullet yaw caused by firing the bullets out of a light sporter barrel were responsible for the measured discrepancy in BC's. The tests do not confirm that theory. Some have suggested the testing was done to make Litz look bad. I think not. It was more of a knock on the whole industry for publishing optimistic BC's. I didn't do a thorough check, but of the BC's that were found to be off, no correction has been made by manufacturers to their published numbers. I recall there was one that was off by 45% and it has not been corrected.
I only bring it up as a reminder that we cannot take these numbers as the gospel. This was the second of two tests done by the same author. I have not been able to find the first document.
I think the Berger Twist Rate Calculator is credible and Litz is probably responsible for the specifics of it. But, it uses BC, and that may have some error...
There is another calculator on line by Kolbe. He was the former owner of Border Barrels. It is credible as well, but requires more bullet dimensional data as a basis of input. Berger is one of the few companies that provides something close to a full disclosure of those dimensions.
Which ballistic program do you use?BCs should not be considered absolute, and for this reason the better ballistic programs have a BC correction feature.
Ron, whether or not the BCs are inaccurate is irrelevant to this discussion. Stability is dependent upon bullet length, and the bullet's rotational velocity, and BC does not enter the equation, unless the discussion pertains to transonic instability at long range.
As for discrepancies concerning BCs, the results are very different if testing is conducted at high altitude or low, in dry air or humid, in warm temperatures or cold. Consider that Sierra revised their BCs after they moved their plant to Missouri from California. Then there is the likelihood of inconsistencies between chronographs, so its not surprising that BC can be somewhat suggestive. BCs should not be considered absolute, and for this reason the better ballistic programs have a BC correction feature.
Ron, whether or not the BCs are inaccurate is irrelevant to this discussion. Stability is dependent upon bullet length, and the bullet's rotational velocity, and BC does not enter the equation, unless the discussion pertains to transonic instability at long range.
BC's will also change with velocity changes. So some people will "step" the BC's in their ballistics program for the appropriate BC's as the projectile losses velocity throughout its flight.
Read the books applied ballistics , you will like them booksWill the following twist rate work to stablize
Bullet: 7mm 175 gr. eld-x
Twist. 9.5
Round. 7mm R.E.M. Mag
Thank you
You should look more carefully at the results of the Berger Twist Rate Calculator. When the Stability Factor drops below 1.5, the calculator estimates a degredation to the BC. In other words if you do not have enough spin, the stability is still OK, but the Ballistic Coefficient suffers, and down range velocity suffers. The BC calculations become inaccurate. Where this becomes relevant is when you do not have enough twist to get a 1.5 stability factor. In some cases a higher BC bullet even after degredation due to reduced stability may be the higher BC, and still worth considering.
Bullet length is the biggest factor in determining the stability factor, but not the only one. The actual bullet shape, and density is relevant too.
Which ballistic program do you use?
Dark
Litz don't work for nosler, hornady , lapua, Ect he does work for Berger , he also worked for the Air Force developing and testing missles , so I'd trust his BC's before trusting what the bullet manufacturers post on there box of ammo