Not that one would do this but:
Rifle hanging by a string and fired vs a rifle with the butt against a wall and fired.
If all else were equal the one hanging by the string would fire a bullet with a measurable lower velocity?
No...
Not that one would do this but:
Rifle hanging by a string and fired vs a rifle with the butt against a wall and fired.
If all else were equal the one hanging by the string would fire a bullet with a measurable lower velocity?
I agree with the Phooey on bogus science part. Unfortunately your "science" is ............... um.... well, let's say not actual science.Not hardly...
175 grain bullet @2600 fps = 65 pound-feet of momentum.
65 pound-feet of momentum divided by a 10 pound rifle = 6.5 fps
Bullet barrel time = ~ 1/1000 sec.
Rifle rearward travel while bullet is accelerating = 0.00652"
The shortening of the bullet travel by 0.00652" has NO effect on velocity - plus, the rifle recoils the same amount (durring bullet travel), whether you let it free, or shoulder restrain it.
Phooey on bogus science !!!
I agree with the Phooey on bogus science part. Unfortunately your "science" is ............... um.... well, let's say not actual science.
Sometimes it helps to take things to the limit to help understanding. Impulse is force x time or Mass x change in velocity (which is the same as change in momentum).
Imagine a rifle with a mass of 69 grains (including the case weight) firing a bullet which weighs 69 grains. Suspended by a string, when the charge ignited the bullet would fly out of the cartridge one direction at a high velocity and the rifle would recoil the other direction with the same velocity; i.e. the change in momentum would be equal and opposite.
But if the lightweight rifle were restrained so that it could not move, then the change in momentum of the rifle would be zero and the entire impulse would be dedicated to launching the bullet, this time at a higher velocity.
Of course a real rifle has much more mass than 69gr (let's not argue mass vs weight in this thread please) but the idea is the same. Energy from the charge can be entirely dedicated to launching the bullet (can we also ignore noise and light please?) or it can be partially dedicated to moving the rifle the opposite direction, depending on how the rifle is restrained.
So, are you saying that you have shot both ways, over a chronograph and saw no difference in velocity?Not really - you cannot restrain a 10 pound rifle from moving rearward 0.006" - and if you did, PLEASE tell me how much more velocity you gain with a 0.006" longer barrel.
The original question was free recoil vs held against the shoulder... and you are arguing angels and pinheads - a silly case, and a total waste of time.
So, are you saying that you have shot both ways, over a chronograph and saw no difference in velocity?
Well, I'm saying that I have too and that it did make a difference. Only one of us is right or it matters more in some setups than others. I've already described the equipment I used, which is typical br equipment and calibers.Yup... and if there is a theoretical difference, it is smaller than the ES and lost in the noise.
Simplistically: energy used to move the rifle backwards could have been used to move the bullet forward. Drew
Thanks all I thought internal pressure is why you get the speed Now I know different tonight when we race I will add more weight to the oil pan so the cylinders make more pressure . LarryOK, so it sounds like you would like to shoot better? Please give this some thought... Micro parts of a second is shorter in a shorter barrel then a longer one. The "time" it takes the bullet to travel is where you make or break a good shot vs a bad shot. Aside from matching the proper resident frequency of the bullet to the gun barrel, it also may help to consider your grip and follow through. ( about five pounds strait down and about five pounds strait back)
If you eliminate all of the variables theoretically the every bullet should go through the same hole. A ransom rest locks the gun down and should remove all but the ammo factor. That is why it seems better to first bench shoot to find the best load your gun likes before testing your shooting skills. It would be good to have a member test the NuFinish car polish to see if it shoots cleaner as well as faster.
Well, I'm saying that I have too and that it did make a difference. Only one of us is right or it matters more in some setups than others. I've already described the equipment I used, which is typical br equipment and calibers.
Thanks all I thought internal pressure is why you get the speed Now I know different tonight when we race I will add more weight to the oil pan so the cylinders make more pressure . Larry
I never have filled the Chamber from the oil pan . I will leave that trick to you. LarryI'm willing to bet that if you filled the oil pan so high that the pistons couldn't move in response to the fuel detonation you would see an increase in chamber pressure.
I never have filled the Chamber from the oil pan . I will leave that trick to you. Larry
Spot on! Way back when I used a 45 ACP to compete I would often load very light and noticed that when my wife would often cause a stove pipe round and wondered why."Shoot the primer on a slug shell with a BB gun and see the case hit you between the eyes!"
Darn, I thought my cousin and I were the only two 7 year olds on earth that were dumb enough to try that.
As an aside, I would bet that more than a few on this site have "cured" a newbies failure to feed in a 1911 by having them tighten their grip so the energy that is making the gun bounce around in their hand is now driving the slide back all the way. (We used to call it "limp wristing" . Guess a new term will have to be coined to be PC.)