Obviously having a long bullet which is pushed into the throat very fast is what constitutes a barrel burning cartridge. It seems this equates to a high BC bullet leaving at say 3000FPS+ (as an a example).
Here is what confuses me.
Now if we have the same length of bullet and the bore becomes larger, thus BC goes down, but velocity still remains the same, it sounds from reading that this becomes less of a barrel burner. Why?
To me it seems that the primary factor should be length of copper which is engraved each time it passes the throat, regardless of diameter of the bore. I know there are more minute factors like jacket/barrel hardness and etc.
So can anyone explain better what actually predicts just how destructive a certain cartridge will be to the throat?
Here is what confuses me.
Now if we have the same length of bullet and the bore becomes larger, thus BC goes down, but velocity still remains the same, it sounds from reading that this becomes less of a barrel burner. Why?
To me it seems that the primary factor should be length of copper which is engraved each time it passes the throat, regardless of diameter of the bore. I know there are more minute factors like jacket/barrel hardness and etc.
So can anyone explain better what actually predicts just how destructive a certain cartridge will be to the throat?