No!Wouldn't that be like putting a gallon of gas in two different cars and one going 14 miles and the other going 20. Larry
No!Wouldn't that be like putting a gallon of gas in two different cars and one going 14 miles and the other going 20. Larry
There goes the sticker statement on the car I just got . Thanks Larry
Thanks dkhunt14. This exactly was my question and reasonings behind it.To me it means if you take a 105 grain 6MM bullet. If it takes 32 grains in one cartridge to make it go 3000. Then you take another cartridge and it takes 42 grains to get the same. The one with 32 grains is more efficient. Matt
Exactly, the car I can easily tell you why(won't go in details).Wouldn't that be like putting a gallon of gas in two different cars and one going 14 miles and the other going 20. Larry
You are right but I'm not comparing two different calibers here..243 Winchester with 100 grain bullet and 49.0 grains of powder @2980 fps = 50 ft lbs of energy per grain of powder.
.308 Winchester with 150 grain bullet and 41.3 grains of powder @ 2887 fps = 67 ft lbs of energy per grain of powder.
The .243 produces more velocity, but the .308 produces more energy per grain of powder, while using a smaller amount of powder, which shows it's efficiency.
Yep, to make any test comparing the Dasher case to a 243AI case would need the 243AI case to have been fire formed from Palma brass... Then you have a test..I think some of what we see is pressure holding ability. Theres no free lunch and I am sure we are running these dashers at a much higher pressure than a 243 case would take.
It still would take more powder to get the same speed as a Dasher. Yes you could get more top end but it takes a lot more powder to do it. MattYep, to make any test comparing the Dasher case to a 243AI case would need the 243AI case to have been fire formed from Palma brass... Then you have a test..
6.5x284 and 6.5x55 improved. The 6.5x55 improved easily equals the velocity of the 6.5x284, using less powder and operating at substantially lower C.U.P. Operating at lower pressure and burning less powder for equal velocity and energy = efficiency.
Edit: both cases using the same weight bullet.
Another example is the 6PPC & 6MM BEGGS. The BEGGS holds 2 grains less powder than the PPC, with equal velocity and energy, shooting the same weight bullet.
Same powder for the first example, and same for the second example.OK, but are they both using the SAME powder, or NO???
IF NO, you can't call one case more "efficient" than the other.
The POWDER itself is what is allowing for the perceived "efficiency" of the case...
The case merely represents a volume of space where a given powder combusts in, generating the necessary energy to do work (generate velocity) upon a constant mass (same weight bullet).
Did you guys flunk Physics, or did you not even take the class?
Either way, there's no free lunch that allows for "X" case to cheat the laws of thermodynamics.
Nvreloader illustrated an accurate comparison, using constants to calculate 'efficiency' within a given case.
Unless someone can document a test that isolates the CASE ITSELF as the determining factor of "efficiency", while everything else remains a constant, the notion of one case being "more efficient" than another remains a subjective opinion.
But hey, if it makes ya feel better to shoot one, then keep on keepin' on about it, LOL