AckleymanII
Gold $$ Contributor
Thawed turkey's or Ham would work better, 12 lb minimum.
Not sure...I really want a simple repeatable way to measure. Paper makes nice prints, all I need is just to get the bullet to expand. I’m going to try drywall and maybe a thin piece of aluminum. One thing I do know is I don’t want anything impeding the fragments once it starts.Wouldn’t an slow motion video while shot thru clear ballistic gel show the same thing? It should show the fragmentation pattern along with the energy transfer? Not sure how to measure it but it would definitely be visible.
Test 1 Summary: No expansion from either .224 55g VMax bullet. Bullets were both fired at ~ 3040fps from 1:12 and 1:8 twist 223’s. Clean holes all the way through both sets of test paper. I need to revisit the first layer of the target to get expansion initiated....clearly the 55g Vmax is tougher than anticipated.
Current first layer used rabbit fur, backed with 1/16” of modeling clay, then attached to card stock.....this yielded zero expansion.
Any thoughts on a better first layer expansion media? I’m going to scrap the fur, it’s a PITA and gets everywhere. I can just use bare leather instead.
I’m glad it was only 110 degrees outside today! I think I’ll wait for it to cool off a bit before I retest.
Purposely trying to avoid the hydraulic shock factor. I’m trying to measure the fragmentation difference (if any) due to spin. I was able to do this...see the results of test 2Like @Knotwild, I don't claim to be any sort of ballstician. I think you are missing a key component in your ballistic media that some have suggested - hydraulic pressure. What makes a critter blow up? It's water content. Water doesn't come close to simulating a real critter, it is non compressible, however it is repeatable and easy to clean upI would use a small Styrofoam cup or zip lock bag of water in front of your target to initiate expansion.
Bullet construction is complicated business. Lots of factors come into play...but I have a theory that shorter stubbier bullets will concentrate energy over a smaller Surface area and come apart easier...just a theory.Any thought to the size of the hollow point? The old Speer "Flying Ashtrays" were always spectacular on prairie dogs.
Seen it a bunch, 300 BLK does both really well. I have tested a lot of purpose built subsonic bullets for hunting. At 1000 fps, you need Hydrodynamics. Try a 190 SMK through ballistic media with a road kill deer behind it - you won't recover the bullet.Purposely trying to avoid the hydraulic shock factor. I’m trying to measure the fragmentation difference (if any) due to spin. I was able to do this...see the results of test 2
This is a cause and effect issue....in my mind it’s the bullet that causes the Hydraulic shock effect on tissue. Once you understand what is happening with the bullet itself the you can better understand/model the hydraulic effect. Now we are getting into hydrodynamics...yikes! Big question for me is how does the sonic shockwave play into this hydraulic effect? Shoot one bullet slightly below the speed of sound and another slightly above it (both into gel)...that would be interesting and something I haven’t seen.
Understanding what is going on is a lot of fun! And I agree with you on proving splat factor (very subjective)...just trying to make sense of what is happening. But if a bullet does expand in a more efficient way because of spin it should cause more hydraulic (but thats another order of magnitude more complicated...step 1 first!Seen it
Seen it a bunch, 300 BLK does both really well. I have tested a lot of purpose built subsonic bullets for hunting. At 1000 fps, you need Hydrodynamics. Try a 190 SMK through ballistic media with a road kill deer behind it - you won't recover the bullet.
Not disagreeing just posting experiences. I understand what you are doing, interested in the results, but I'm not sure it proves a splat factor. If you shoot a bullet designed for minimum expansion at 1800 fps subsonic, it pencils through just like that SMK described. Not gonna goof up your other thread with my theories AI. Glad someone else enjoys testing stuff.
From what I have read in real world testing is the high rpms seem to give more POP and wow on Pdogs. People using a 1/12 twist say that a 1/8 or 1/9 at the same velocites give more POP. The only major difference is the RPMS.When the material properties are factored in the complexity goes up exponentially. Distributed forces along a rotating bullet of a given construction is where the material scientists come in and I lose my steam. I’m getting too old for differential equations!
I did calculate the total energy for both forward motion and rotation using a 55g 6mm bullet
Forward: 1490J @ 914.4m/s (3000fps)
2648J @ 1219m/s (4000fps)
Rotational: 4.19J @ 150,000RPM
16.75J @ 300,000RPM
So you are 100% correct that the forward kinetic energy dominates the rotational....but the rotational energy will send fragments out radially with 4x the force (when RPM doubles) once impact occurs. So the Fragment dispersion cone should be greater and dump more of that forward kinetic energy over a larger area.
Had to dust off the calculator! Feel free to check my math, the conversions can always bite you.
Understanding what is going on is a lot of fun! And I agree with you on proving splat factor (very subjective)...just trying to make sense of what is happening. But if a bullet does expand in a more efficient way because of spin it should cause more hydraulic (but thats another order of magnitude more complicated...step 1 first!(at least that's where my small brain takes me). Thanks for the reply...I enjoy learni
Allthings -t others have experienced.