V
Vibe
Guest
I always wondered what my avatar sounded like....Now I know.
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You did ask for it.Maybe the muzzle brake thread should be resurrected, too, since the physics-differently-abled had trouble with that one, too.
Toby Bradshaw
baywingdb@comcast.net
You did ask for it.
We export a certain number of feral pigs to Europe. They're rank enough, but the European laws require that they be shot (& carry the bullet hole to prove it) for them to be accepted & imported as game meat.IHow much pork could a .22 chop if a .22 could chop pork?"
Please be charitable to those who think of Newton's Third Law as the Third Suggestion.
Toby Bradshaw
Dang Bill. I have to give you that one.Newton's Forth Observation of Motion(doesn't quite rise to the status of a law)
"It is a wonder of the highest order that some of us know which direction to point a rifle, much less, find the trigger."
Concho Bill
Now there is a fairly apt analogy.
Dang Bill. I have to give you that one.
That has got to be, hands down, one of, if not THE most accurate post you've made in this thread.
Reference the movie "Flight of the Phoenix".Remembered another instance of a cartridge used to turn an engine, the starter cartridges used for some radial engines. They look more like a large shot shell sized blank cartridge.
Your "Stock HP" may also be correct...for the few thousandths of inch that it's powered. While the Momentum of the stock is equal to the momentum of the bullet and gasses, the energy is not, so the change in energy is not the same - therefore the HP cannot be the same. Quite frankly I'd never thought to look at the HP from the perspective of stock movement. But, like you, I was a bit surprised at the disparity.Vibe,
I still stand by my stock horsepower calcs...
as far as bullet horsepower, I will apolgize and say your ~3600hp is right.
I can't find any way around it hahaha! I really wasnt expecting it was going to be that high.
Cheers. It was fun.
You have now had two people with engineering degrees tell you different. If you STILL chose to remain ignorant, it's now all on you.I respectfully submit one more time that the work done by a 220 grain bullet with a muzzle velocity of 300 feet per second is way less than one horsepower.
Horsepower is defined as work done over time. The exact definition of one horsepower is 33,000 lb.ft./minute (550 foot pounds / second). Put another way, if you were to lift 33,000 pounds one foot over a period of one minute, you would have been working at the rate of one horsepower. In this case, you'd have expended one horsepower-minute of energy.
This is true, however that is a statement of conservation of Momentum. The Energy is NOT similarly conserved.Newton's third law of motion states for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Therefore: The weight of the bullet X it's velocity is equal to the weight of the rifle X it's velocity. They are exactly the same.
We'd been using 200, but what the heck.220 grain bullet = .0314 pounds (a good sized bullet).
0.0314 under the influence of the acceleration of GRAVITY (32/ft/sec/sec).0314 pounds X 3000 feet per second = 94.2 foot pounds per second.
You have now had two people with engineering degrees tell you different. If you STILL chose to remain ignorant, it's now all on you.
LOL. Yep...But not this one.Respectfully, we can disagree and not be disagreeable.
Not to make this personal, Vibe, but on any test at the school of engineering that you attended did you miss any question?
I will freely admit that my numbers are not completely accurate, but that is due to the fact that I have simplified the math to the point that the Integral Calculus required to accurately determine the true and actual acceleration has been reduced to a simple averaging of velocity -other wise the HP number would really be quite a bit higher. The actual time in barrel is a bit less than my "estimate". Your new 220 grain bullet at 3000 fps from a 26" barrel would more likely be applying closer to 6000HP to the bullet.What I am saying is that even people with engineering degrees are sometimes in disagreement. Could it be that you and others have complicated a simple definition of a horsepower into something James Watt would not recognize?
Concho Bill
We are not concerned with this because it was not part of the quetstion. This "work done by the bullet" is just he bullet bleeding off all of the energy that we applied to it during the firing process.I respectfully submit one more time that the work done by a 220 grain bullet with a muzzle velocity of 300 feet per second is way less than one horsepower.
:dengineering is the art of modelling materials we do not wholly understand, into shapes we cannot precisely analyse so as to withstand forces we cannot properly assess, in such a way that the public has no reason to suspect the extent of our ignorance.
- dr ar dykes -