I recently loaded up some .223 ammo for some stability testing in a few rifles, both 1:9 twist. The bullet in this ammo is 77gr Nosler CC, and I'm very aware that this twist is going to have marginal stability with a bullet of that weight / length.
The rifle I did some testing with usually shoots about 1/2 MOA at 100yds, and keeps very good sub-MOA groups out past 500 yds with 69gr SMK factory ammo. But with the 77gr ammo, it showed a massive vertical spread, nearly 3.5 MOA at 500yds (with 1 MOA to 2 MOA horizontal spreading). Could this be a symptom of under-stability? Groups at 100yds looked decent, but not great - just starting to show vertical stringing.
The 500yd targets showed no significant key-holing, or any other issues I would typically think of when I think of under-stability. So could this be a stability issue, and does it sound like a typical stability symptom, or am I fighting something else??
I wanted to investigate what stability does downrange, thinking maybe the stability was acceptable at shorter ranges, but was getting worse downrange, so I checked out the Berger Stability Calculator.
I entered in the information for my 6.5cm, and it gave a stability of 1.50. As I decreased the muzzle velocity, the stability factor got worse (less stable). But of course, changing the muzzle velocity also changes the rotation velocity as it's leaving the barrel, since twist rate is really a ratio of velocity to rotational velocity. So by changing the numbers in that calculator, we're changing our initial velocity AND our initial rotational speed - not a very good simulation of what happens downrange.
So does linear velocity decay faster than the rotation velocity? My engineering background says it probably does. But i don't understand the relationships involved enough to know whether the stability coefficient would get better or worse (up to the Transonic point, of course). Does the stability get better or worse as the bullet travels downrange?
The rifle I did some testing with usually shoots about 1/2 MOA at 100yds, and keeps very good sub-MOA groups out past 500 yds with 69gr SMK factory ammo. But with the 77gr ammo, it showed a massive vertical spread, nearly 3.5 MOA at 500yds (with 1 MOA to 2 MOA horizontal spreading). Could this be a symptom of under-stability? Groups at 100yds looked decent, but not great - just starting to show vertical stringing.
The 500yd targets showed no significant key-holing, or any other issues I would typically think of when I think of under-stability. So could this be a stability issue, and does it sound like a typical stability symptom, or am I fighting something else??
I wanted to investigate what stability does downrange, thinking maybe the stability was acceptable at shorter ranges, but was getting worse downrange, so I checked out the Berger Stability Calculator.
I entered in the information for my 6.5cm, and it gave a stability of 1.50. As I decreased the muzzle velocity, the stability factor got worse (less stable). But of course, changing the muzzle velocity also changes the rotation velocity as it's leaving the barrel, since twist rate is really a ratio of velocity to rotational velocity. So by changing the numbers in that calculator, we're changing our initial velocity AND our initial rotational speed - not a very good simulation of what happens downrange.
So does linear velocity decay faster than the rotation velocity? My engineering background says it probably does. But i don't understand the relationships involved enough to know whether the stability coefficient would get better or worse (up to the Transonic point, of course). Does the stability get better or worse as the bullet travels downrange?