Butch Lambert
Active member
So the barrel moves up and down and not side to side? What would cause this other than gravity?
Butch
Butch
Strange forces from the DARK SIDE!So the barrel moves up and down and not side to side? What would cause this other than gravity?
Butch
So the barrel moves up and down and not side to side? What would cause this other than gravity?
Butch
So the barrel moves up and down and not side to side? What would cause this other than gravity?
Butch
Bill Myers, noted rimfire shooter, gunsmith, and now action producer, built a mechanism to allow attaching an electronic indicator to the barrel of a rail gun setup. With this measure and hold indicator, he could rotate it about the barrel axis as he fired. What he found out was that a barrel actually moves up and down in a 1 O'clock to 7 O'clock swing. I would bet that a left hand twist barrel would vibrate in an 11 O'clock to 5 O'clock swing.So the barrel moves up and down and not side to side? What would cause this other than gravity?
Butch
Action flex and lug slap on something like a glued in Stolle Panda?? I doubt it.I've been told by some perty smart fellers that the driving force has to do more with action flex and lug slap, mostly the result of bolt slop and the angled sear engagement surfaces.
My own testing includes such simple devices as Skip Otto's penny-on-the-barrel and hanging cups of water on the barrel (The Skipper again)........ these tests show a lot of repeatable barrel vibration without ever firing a shot. I've heard, read and postulated that these vibrations are primarily on the vertical plane.
Gravity droop and the 'garden hose effect' no doubt add to these vibrations but I can't measure these effects.
I own a magnetic barrel tuner and with this and a dial indicator it's pretty easy to see that the barrel DOES droop but....... BTW SS rifle barrels are quite ferrous.
al
If you measure extreme spread you are not using the data from every shot. You are throwing away the data in the middle. So, you are not counting every shot. SD does use all the information.
Just for my edification, how many 5-shot strings does it take you to come up with your "exact" value of ES for a particular load?
And, if you had the following velocity data from 10 shots per load (with all other variables the same), how would you calculate ES (and any other stats you consider useful)? Which load would you choose for competitive short-range BR, and why?
Load 1 Load 2 Load 3 Load 4
1000 3350 3354 3350
1000 3350 3354 3360
1000 3350 3354 3350
1000 3350 3354 3360
1000 3350 3354 3350
1000 3360 3354 3360
1000 3360 3354 3350
1000 3360 3354 3360
1000 3360 3354 3350
1000 3360 3364 3360
Toby Bradshaw
baywingdb@comcast.net
now concerning your chart, I'm confused about load 1 so I'll ignore it. (statistical analysis generally allows this ) I'm guessing that it's there because you're still including wind drift on some level? Anyway, I'll ignore it.
For pointblank BR the info contained in #2,#3,#4 is completely useless, it can't tell you anything no matter how you parse it.
For longrange group shooting, 600-1000yds, the three groups of numbers are equal TO ME
To you, load #3 is the obvious winner.
In the interest of clarifying communication, why the 4s and 5s and hard-to-locate 6 in load #3?
My accelerometer sensors always showed 2/3 amplitude in the verticle, 1/3 in the horizontal. Take the same sensor and clamp it at various clock angles at the muzzle of the barrel and the this amplitude ratio was always exactly repeatable......................Don
Jerry asked me to make a comment here so I will.
OK Jerry, I have made a comment and that will be it. I know you fine folks can figure it out without me.
BR and Long range shooting are sports I dearly love and I continue to work with new ideas (some folks probably think some of my contraptions are a bit odd) and I will be building a rifle for my wife Nancy in coming months--I believe she loves to shoot almost as much as I do. BTW, I am attaching a photo of her first two 1000 yard BR groups fired in her life--shot last month at the IBS 1000 yard Nationals, Pella, Iowa (we were shooting the 6mm 115 grain DTAC not 115 DATC).
Henry
It's there because you said that, for BR, ES is all that matters. The 1000fps load has the lowest ES, but I doubt that anyone (including you) would prefer it to Loads 2-4. Ergo, even you don't believe that ES is all that matters.
Speak for yourself.
And yet, if you were shooting 5-shot groups, and ES determined vertical dispersion, the 2-group (vertical) agg would be different for each of Loads 2-4 (with 2 being best and 4 being worst). Why is this not of interest to you?
I've never used chronograph data to choose a load, nor have I ever shot at 1000yd. But I don't have a "favorite" without looking at some targets.
To make the mean velocity the same for loads 2-4. Like you, I eschew obfuscation.
Toby Bradshaw
baywingdb@comcast.net
Bill Myers, noted rimfire shooter, gunsmith, and now action producer, built a mechanism to allow attaching an electronic indicator to the barrel of a rail gun setup. With this measure and hold indicator, he could rotate it about the barrel axis as he fired. What he found out was that a barrel actually moves up and down in a 1 O'clock to 7 O'clock swing. I would bet that a left hand twist barrel would vibrate in an 11 O'clock to 5 O'clock swing.
Al, did it ever occur to you that if your 3142, 3143, etc numbers are in error in relation to the true velocities of those shots that your summary data, Mean Velocity, Standard Deviation, and Extreme Spread will be junk?
In most artificial light sources a sky screen based chronograph will give really wild results just because of the 60 cycle flicker of the light source.
And, we have not even discussed sample size yet and how that relates to accuracy.
Action flex and lug slap on something like a glued in Stolle Panda?? I doubt it.