jackie schmidt
New member
Randy, sometime tomorrow I will see if I can get an accurate twist rate on those two barrels.
We got to the range early yesterday, I checked the tune on my rail gun with Bart’s 65 BT’s, shooting good. Same 13.5 twist Krieger.
I then switched to the 80 grn, not good. Even it light conditions, it was stuck around .250 5 shot groups.
When the wind kicked up, things got worse. No pattern to the groups. I tried a few things it would not get any better.
I switched back to the Bart’s with 30.0 grns of 133, shot a 5 shot mid one.
So much for that. It takes a 12 twist barrel to make the 80’s really work. They might not be going sideways out of a 13.5, but apparently they are not stable enough to fly true in heavier conditions.
RandyThank you, Jackie. I just ran a guesstimate (bullet geometry) the Geoffrey Kolbe twist calculator < http://www.geoffrey-kolbe.com/cgi-bin/barrel_twist.cgi > , which, regarding twist rate requirements, always correlates well with McTwist and Tioga, but has easier inputs for varying atmosphere - even at 80* F, your elevation, Sg is between 1.0 and 1.0, thus, the results you are observing. The 1:12" twist, sorta, kinda works - for Sg1.4, a 6mm BT of that length, you need about 1:11" twist; for Sg 1.5, you need 1:10.5", or, close to it. RG
Randy
How did they come up with the 1.5 number as the target?
I’ve seen that referenced on all the twist calculators but never knew where or who it came from
Randy
How did they come up with the 1.5 number as the target?
I’ve seen that referenced on all the twist calculators but never knew where or who it came from
That's a good questions which leads to an observation:
A typical 100/200 Benchrest rifle(13.5 twist, 66-68 grain bullet .840" measured length, 3300 fps) has an Sg of less than 1.1 using the JBM stability calculator. Even a 13 twist(which I've tried) is still under 1.2 Sg.
Surely we can't all be running on the ragged edge of stability. This combination has set almost all of the newer group and agg records.
Any thoughts on that Randy?
it tell you that load is about to go to sleep when it goes to sleep it will be smaller then your round is righttom, go back to the pictures in my post #9. There is a single bullet on that “s”. I measured ir with dial calibers, it does measure right at .243.
I started making 6mm bullets back 20 yrs ago with advice from the BIB. I started with .825's at 65gr. shooting a 14 twist. They shot ok but fussy as heck in the heat /wind. Went to .790 and ( got one load and RARELY had to do anything but change depth.) hmmmm????? . I still have 600 of the longer ones that Im gonna shoot in a 13.5 Kreiger when the governor says its ok.Much of the the 30BR's success is the result of the guidance of R.G., as relates to Sg. It's proven math....that map is well drawn.
Why more 6PPC users don't apply that methodology to their platforms after all these years is something that still has me shaking my head.
I've had a couple of really good 6PPC BR guns with 14 and 13.5 twist barrels. With the .825 long 67-68 gr. bullets of various manufacturers, I never could make the same tuneup work from day to day. When I changed to the .790 jacketed bullets, I suddenly became a really smart tuner!
Good shootin'. -Al