B
Brian_K
Guest
Not sure if all are aware, but a guy called Tony Purdy has come up with a method of tuning rimfire rifles which appears to be having some good results.
I asked Tony if he though his system could be applied to air rifles, he reckons so and has given me a new formula to work to.
I list it below for those who may be interested:
"With the slower speed of the pellet and the milder vibrations, I am wondering if working in the lower harmonics will have a better chance of working
What that means is that any length we work with past eh muzzel will be a bit longer. But being that the air rifle barrel tends to be on the short side, this might not end up being to bad
I understand that AR barrels are a bit finicky when it comes to tuning, so lower harmonics may be of benefit as well.
If someone had a 16" barrel and we use the 7th Harmonic. lets see what we would need for a length
There are 7 quarter waves in a tube for the 7th harmonic, so we want the pellet to leave at the 6th QW
divide the barrel by 6 16/6 = 2.667
Since we need 7 QW to have the correct harmonic multiply by 7 2.667 X 7 = 18.667 This is what is called an acoustic length
The waves in a tube do not rebound directly at the end, they travel a bit past the end before reflecting. This is part of the acoustic length and needs to be removed to get the actual physicallength to have a barrel tuned to the 7th Harmonic. This is called an End Correction
I have found that using .3 times the diameter of the tuner opening gives us the best EC. If the opening of the tube is 10mm, we would multiply 10 X .3 and we get 3mm.
We will need a tube/tuner to get the length we need to tune
If we have a tube that is 2.667 and we remove the 3mm ( sorry for the mix of measurement units) we come up with a physical length the tuner needs to be. Now all you need is a tube thick enough to support being bored to fit the barrel, with a tuner bore of 10mm, and long enough to attach to the barrel and still have the correct distance out past the muzzle."
Using my 17" barrel on the TM1000 I came up with a figure of 19.644" and have made a tube out of brass to give me the required length. See how it goes this weekend.
Brian
I asked Tony if he though his system could be applied to air rifles, he reckons so and has given me a new formula to work to.
I list it below for those who may be interested:
"With the slower speed of the pellet and the milder vibrations, I am wondering if working in the lower harmonics will have a better chance of working
What that means is that any length we work with past eh muzzel will be a bit longer. But being that the air rifle barrel tends to be on the short side, this might not end up being to bad
I understand that AR barrels are a bit finicky when it comes to tuning, so lower harmonics may be of benefit as well.
If someone had a 16" barrel and we use the 7th Harmonic. lets see what we would need for a length
There are 7 quarter waves in a tube for the 7th harmonic, so we want the pellet to leave at the 6th QW
divide the barrel by 6 16/6 = 2.667
Since we need 7 QW to have the correct harmonic multiply by 7 2.667 X 7 = 18.667 This is what is called an acoustic length
The waves in a tube do not rebound directly at the end, they travel a bit past the end before reflecting. This is part of the acoustic length and needs to be removed to get the actual physicallength to have a barrel tuned to the 7th Harmonic. This is called an End Correction
I have found that using .3 times the diameter of the tuner opening gives us the best EC. If the opening of the tube is 10mm, we would multiply 10 X .3 and we get 3mm.
We will need a tube/tuner to get the length we need to tune
If we have a tube that is 2.667 and we remove the 3mm ( sorry for the mix of measurement units) we come up with a physical length the tuner needs to be. Now all you need is a tube thick enough to support being bored to fit the barrel, with a tuner bore of 10mm, and long enough to attach to the barrel and still have the correct distance out past the muzzle."
Using my 17" barrel on the TM1000 I came up with a figure of 19.644" and have made a tube out of brass to give me the required length. See how it goes this weekend.
Brian