I have a custom, switch barrel rifle (223 and 308) I use for predator control around my chicken coop and yard (skunks, raccoons, fox, coyote), deer hunting, and coyotes in the winter. I want to develop a quieter, less destructive 223 round for predator control around the house and for late fall, early spring racoons/fox. I know I can use Blue Dot powder to develop a load that runs around 2,200 fps, or slightly more than a 22 mag and slightly less than a 22 hornet. I know there can be safety issues if you double charge a Blue Dot load, but I am pretty anal and weight everything. I am not concerned about developing a safe load at my desired velocity.
I want to use a 40 grain V-max for the bullet, as slowed down, and from my reading, I think it will be fur friendly for fox and coon and serve as an effective predator deterrent around he house. My problem seems to be my twist. My 223 barrel is 1:12 and I normally shoot 52-55 grain bullets for coyote.
Using Berger's twist rate calculator with a the 40 grain Vmax, BC at .200, bullet length .686 (from JBM bullet length database), and fps at 2,200, it returns a stability value of 1.08, which is marginally stable. When I move the speed up to 3,600 my value moves up to 1.27, which is still marginal. To get a comfortably stable value of 1.56 at 2,200 fps, I have to move up to a 1:10 twist. I don't have a problem doing that as the cost of another barrel is lot cheaper than a new rifle and scope.
My question is can someone explain the relationship between bullet stability, twist, and bullet speed? I know the formulas for this include bullet speed, but I want a dumbed down version. In general, from what it appears, if you slow down a bullet you need to spin it faster to keep it stable, or vice versa, if you speed up a bullet, you need a slower twist to keep it stable. Is this a reasonable conclusion?
I want to use a 40 grain V-max for the bullet, as slowed down, and from my reading, I think it will be fur friendly for fox and coon and serve as an effective predator deterrent around he house. My problem seems to be my twist. My 223 barrel is 1:12 and I normally shoot 52-55 grain bullets for coyote.
Using Berger's twist rate calculator with a the 40 grain Vmax, BC at .200, bullet length .686 (from JBM bullet length database), and fps at 2,200, it returns a stability value of 1.08, which is marginally stable. When I move the speed up to 3,600 my value moves up to 1.27, which is still marginal. To get a comfortably stable value of 1.56 at 2,200 fps, I have to move up to a 1:10 twist. I don't have a problem doing that as the cost of another barrel is lot cheaper than a new rifle and scope.
My question is can someone explain the relationship between bullet stability, twist, and bullet speed? I know the formulas for this include bullet speed, but I want a dumbed down version. In general, from what it appears, if you slow down a bullet you need to spin it faster to keep it stable, or vice versa, if you speed up a bullet, you need a slower twist to keep it stable. Is this a reasonable conclusion?