Thanks Jerry! We agree until the quoted part. I do not believe tuners add another variable........................
Also, I do not believe that the natural frequency is a constant at different temps... and of course we have combustion sensitivity to conditions to deal with as well.
Just because a barrel has a fixed tuner, be it locked or integral, does not equate to a tuned barrel IME. If it did, the rimfire shooters wouldn't carry multiple lots of ammo to the match or even the bench. That's merely doing the same thing as tuning with powder charge, etc.
Would you mind sharing how you went about using your tuners back then?
Thanks!--Mike
OK, a shooter can change the powder, adjust the powder amount, select a different bullet design, change to another diameter, adjust the jam or jump, change the primer, then turn the tuner. If this last element is not another variable I can't count.
A given barrel will only shoot to a certain accuracy. It can't shoot a negative group size.
I used the tuner to FINESS the maximum accuracy I could obtain by the traditional tuning components.
True, a tuner can bring some accuracy to an out of tune load/barrel that could be tuned by changing powder, bullet seating, etc. And some shooters use the tuner adjustment tool instead of one of the other component changes. But this has limits, and you will not get the maximum accuracy of the tuning exercise.
One trouble with tuning a centerfire, the barrel, as it gets shot, is constantly changing within its 400-2000 shot life cycle.
My recommendation on tuners, with the tuner installed and in a mid part of its adjustment, use the conventional components of tuning, then adjust the tuner to see if the load accuracy can be finessed. (I.E. the last option not a major component of the tune cycle).
One thing a shooter will find while using different design and weight of tuners, a tuner behind the muzzle will react different than a tuner that extends beyond the muzzle. (AND, a tuner under about 10 ounces total weight will not get you as much change as one over about 10 ounces.)
Beware too, a tuner that is threaded to the barrel and secured with a jam nut will react different than a clamp-on tuner. A clamp-on, tightened too much, say over about 65 in/lb can totally KILL accuracy!!
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