As a curious type, I have been wondering about a few things that I don't see answers to in my limited Google searches.
1) Just how hot is the flame in the chamber when a round is fired? I expect the temperature rises with pressure, but if the chamber is say around 50,000 psi, then what might the temperature inside the chamber be at that moment?
2) I have long wondered what amount of actual pressure it takes to force a bullet from the grip of the case neck. Or how much pressure it takes to force the bullet into the engraving and continue to push it down the barrel with the friction of the rifling trying to hold it back. A .224 diameter bullet has an area of .03940814 square inches. If 50,000 psi exists behind it, that bullet is receiving an actual push of 1,970 lbs. How much of that is needed to escape the neck grip or rifling friction?
3) If a bullet accelerate to near maximum velocity (let us say 3000 fps) in the first 24" of a 1:9 twist barrel, that means the bullet was spun up to 240,000 rpm in about .00133 seconds. How much energy that does take?
I should have been a scientist or lab tech...
Phil
1) Just how hot is the flame in the chamber when a round is fired? I expect the temperature rises with pressure, but if the chamber is say around 50,000 psi, then what might the temperature inside the chamber be at that moment?
2) I have long wondered what amount of actual pressure it takes to force a bullet from the grip of the case neck. Or how much pressure it takes to force the bullet into the engraving and continue to push it down the barrel with the friction of the rifling trying to hold it back. A .224 diameter bullet has an area of .03940814 square inches. If 50,000 psi exists behind it, that bullet is receiving an actual push of 1,970 lbs. How much of that is needed to escape the neck grip or rifling friction?
3) If a bullet accelerate to near maximum velocity (let us say 3000 fps) in the first 24" of a 1:9 twist barrel, that means the bullet was spun up to 240,000 rpm in about .00133 seconds. How much energy that does take?
I should have been a scientist or lab tech...
Phil