More like the 44 S&W special in photo? 50 fps loss?950fps from my 44 with a 250SWC
Can anybody give me a number for how much velocity is lost In a revolver, compared to a comparable length barrel with no cylinder gap? I know that distance of the gap is important, but assuming about .006" gap in a 44 Mag. Thanks!
I only asked this question out of curiosity. I just read a article about the 357 maximum,And they stated that you lose about 200' per second from a test barrel to a revolver of equivalent length.This table shows even more loss.Quite honestly, I did not think the loss was that Extreme. Wow!Saami photo. The faster the burn rate of the powder, the less velocity loss. My guess.View attachment 1207760
I agree, I thought 200fps sounded like a lot also, according to the other chart from AccelR8, it looks more like 100fps. Still a lot but tolerable.200fps loss sounds like a lot...as in "I doubt it"...I had a Dan Wesson 357 many moons ago and tried it with as little gap as would allow the cylinder to still turn, like a few thousandths. I even let it drag some once. There wasn't a lot of difference over my chrono. Maybe 40-50fps if I remember right. The gun quickly heated up and when things would expand the cylinder wouldn't turn. I think .007" or so was the least I could run and the gun not stop after the first 6 rounds. I think it had to be a little more to work right. Then I went the other way to try it. It didn't really loose a lot until I got up around .020" or so. Most are around .010-012".
I think what happens is with heavy bullets and slower powder if the gap is too much the powder doesn't build pressure to burn more. Probably saying that wrong, but slow powder needs a long barrel to continue the pressure build to burn. Short barrels and wide gaps will leave a lot of unburned powder residue in the barrel. Not sure if it's that or the gap costing velocity. Probably some of both.
I have found the same thing with the ones I have. Interesting fact about the 45acp......barrel length {or shortness} doesn't change velocity. So I guess a large cylinder gap doesn't either.I had a S&W 45acp revolver that had a huge gap and it shot awesome. Other than getting dirtier I could see no issues with a large gap and I did target work with it.
maby someone with a Dan Wesson revolver can help ,,,they had adjustable gap ,,,and they might know more about velocity changes and accuracy variation ,,,,RogerCan anybody give me a number for how much velocity is lost In a revolver, compared to a comparable length barrel with no cylinder gap? I know that distance of the gap is important, but assuming about .006" gap in a 44 Mag. Thanks!