The calculation for barrel expansion is the relatively simple "hoop stress" formula. The formula and explanation may be found here. This is the same formula used for almost all vessels symmetric about the axis. We should use the thick-wall model for rifle barrels.
A hot barrel will expand more than a cool one as material properties degrade with temperature increase. The question we have to ask is: Is it significant? While the movement can be calculated or measured, it may not play a significant role in the problem at hand. Small arms is a heavily explored field and most of this work has already been done at military arsenals. There is a vast amount of information available in books and papers. That does not mean that we should stop asking questions and finding the answers.
The recent application of zone plates to iron sights is a good example. Fresnel described the phenomenon in the early nineteenth century but it took a 21st century shooter working almost two hundred years later to put the two together. This now-obvious application of old technology will enable shooters with old eyes (like me) to see their sights clearly, again.
A hot barrel will expand more than a cool one as material properties degrade with temperature increase. The question we have to ask is: Is it significant? While the movement can be calculated or measured, it may not play a significant role in the problem at hand. Small arms is a heavily explored field and most of this work has already been done at military arsenals. There is a vast amount of information available in books and papers. That does not mean that we should stop asking questions and finding the answers.
The recent application of zone plates to iron sights is a good example. Fresnel described the phenomenon in the early nineteenth century but it took a 21st century shooter working almost two hundred years later to put the two together. This now-obvious application of old technology will enable shooters with old eyes (like me) to see their sights clearly, again.
