praveen
Administrator
		Actually, you are saying the same thing.That is not a node definition using OCW, as far as I understand it.
An OCW node is the point around which successive 1% increments in charge weight tend to group, with no reference to velocity.
OCW is repeatable.
By definition, if it's not immediately repeatable, it's not a test.
"An OCW node is the point around which successive 1% increments in charge weight tend to group, with no reference to velocity."
Let's say the node point is 40 grains of powder.
Try some successive 1% increments...
40.4, 40.8, 41.2, 41.6, 42
We can at least agree that ( more powder => more velocity ).
In that case, the velocity produced by 40.4 is going to be greater than 40 grains and 40.8 grains will produce more velocity than 40.4 grain... and so on.
This will hold true for all starting powder charges. And I just ran a load development charge with 0.3 grain increments. And sure enough, the velocities kept increasing with every charge increment.
Now, once a muzzle velocity has been established, the barrel would make no influence on the bullet from that point. Internal ballistics is done at that point.
Only external ballistics come into play. The projectile equation with all the various external influences added to it. And the very basic projectile equation is directly proportional to the initial velocity.
So, then there is no way that any barrel/internal ballistic phenomenon would make a higher velocity bullet group with a lower velocity bullet.
Now, if you would say that increasing charges somehow DO NOT end up increasing the velocity, that is something to be mulled over.
 
	








 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 so I'll just leave it here too and let you all discuss it. Often our views can be influenced by what we want to be true but testing with an open mind is encouraged.
 so I'll just leave it here too and let you all discuss it. Often our views can be influenced by what we want to be true but testing with an open mind is encouraged.
 
 
		
