GSPV
A failure to plan is a plan for failure.
That's the way that I remember it, too.Jackie schmidt started that. He had some kind of bushings like that for marine driveshaft vibrations if i remember right
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That's the way that I remember it, too.Jackie schmidt started that. He had some kind of bushings like that for marine driveshaft vibrations if i remember right
Damping the harmonics can be demonstrated to “work”, independent of any significant mass effect. Easy to see in rimfire. Various rubber donuts lack sufficient means of dissipationFWIW, most people I know that use something like the LimbSavr or o-rings or whatever - as opposed to a more normal barrel tuner with a movable mass, like the ones that Mike Ezewell or Erik Cortina sell - seem to think that what is going on there is something subtly different - dampening the harmonics ever so slightly, as opposed to changing the tuning point.
As Mike pointed out, without in-depth studies and testing, most everything else is anecdotal at best - but when more people start getting results pointing in the same direction, maybe there is something to it.
Hell, if I could duck-tape a banana to my barrel and get positive accuracy improvement, I'd proudly do it.Just call me "Nobody". jd
Hell, if I could duck-tape a banana to my barrel and get positive accuracy improvement, I'd proudly do it.Just call me "Nobody". jd
Good grasp of the obvious. Now, think Outside the boxThe companies that produce the rubber donuts have chosen to call them "dampeners", or some other similar name. That doesn't necessarily imply anything mechanistic about how they're actually working. I doubt the mechanism by which the rubber donut tuners work is substantially any different than a metal tuner. The only real difference might lie in where the two types of tuners are placed on the barrel. I also strongly doubt that a piece of rubber has any "dampening" effect on barrel harmonics by virtue of the material of which they're made and/or "squeezing" the barrel. They're simply functioning as a tuner and affect barrel amplitude/frequency in proportion to their mass and where they're positioned. By analogy, a more typical metal tuner could also be called a "dampener" for both practical and advertisement purposes because they effectively could be perceived to "dampen" barrel harmonics and shrink group size when properly adjusted.
Good grasp of the obvious. Now, think Outside the box
“You can lead em to water, but.........”Please. If you want to make this far more complex than it needs to be, feel free to do some thinking outside the box yourself.
“You can lead em to water, but.........”
I had one in my parts box I got years ago. Thought I would try it put on my modified 10/22 I use for the NRL22 comps. It did reduce the groups but found it needed to be moved for the different ranges. If I set it to tighten up my 50 yard group my 100 yard group would almost double.
If your shooting a fixed range or had extra time to set it for different ranges it would be a benefit. ymmv