Water follows your finger due to adhesion. I doubt a gas at high velocity will follow a radius. At some point it shears off.
Yes "BUT" notice the direction of the lower right arrow. The flow sheared off which is flow separation and the pressure differentials created, causes a reversion of the gasses, which is really just dead flow or space. Then you get into laminar and turbulent flow and Reynolds numbers and Adverse Pressure Gradients if we really want to.It works with gases too, it's called the Coanda Effect
The OP's inquiry was relative to accuracy and not recoil.To reduce recoil you must slow the gas down, let the bullet pass it, then actually direct it backwards. Theres a reason muzzle brakes are designed like they are and thats the reason they work. Theres a chamber/s then a spot for the bullet to exit while not letting the gas go out with it. Theres lots of chamber surface area and length math involved but thats the basics
The OP's inquiry was relative to accuracy and not recoil.
Yes it does if you were worried about recoil. Stripping gasses from a bullet to affect accuracy is another matter.The OP is not the only one asking questions. The above reply concerning recoil makes prefect sense IF one bothers to read the entire thread.
Yes it does if you were worried about recoil. Stripping gasses from a bullet to affect accuracy is another matter.
There have been claims that silencers and certain brakes do in fact aid accuracy, but most of the claims are nothing more than hype to sell your brake that has a different look than the rest of the guys at the range.
Maybe the direction of the vents would not matter, but stripping gasses away in the same direction as flow travel works better than trying to reverse it, as is the case with 99% of all brakes.
This should make perfect sense if one bothers to read it in it's entirety.
This is one of the better explanations of how brakes work that I have seen. Many shooters, gunsmiths, and even brake makers do not understand how brakes work. Many brakes are designed with features that are claimed to make them more effective but which actually have the opposite effect.To the best of my knowledge, which I admit is limited, the muzzle brakes work because of the laws of momentum and energy transfer.
The high pressure and high speed gas "particles" are traveling in the forward +X direction, which drives the recoil of the rifle backward into the -X direction. To boil it down to its most basic level, the energy of the muzzle gas in the +X direction equals the recoil energy in the -X direction. If you can bring the energy of the "particles" of muzzle gas to a lower level, you can decrease the amount of recoil.
Muzzle brakes do this by effectively putting a wall in front of the gases. The wall absorbs any energy the gas "particles" lose in the direction transfer out the sides of the brake. Because the energy in the +X direction is now lower, so is the recoil energy in the -X direction. As a result, the felt recoil is lower. The lower recoil is in direct proportion to the amount of energy the brake's walls can absorb by redirecting the gas "particles."
Muzzle brakes do this by effectively putting a wall in front of the gases. The wall absorbs any energy the gas "particles" lose in the direction transfer out the sides of the brake. Because the energy in the +X direction is now lower, so is the recoil energy in the -X direction. As a result, the felt recoil is lower. The lower recoil is in direct proportion to the amount of energy the brake's walls can absorb by redirecting the gas "particles."
So you say that the high velocity gas being diverted by the "wall" does not impart any force to the wall itself? If you are correct, then a small diameter brake is just as effective as a large one. Whether you call it energy or momentum, the high velocity gas does indeed possess mass just as surely as if it were liquid and diverting the direction of flow imparts force to the diverter.Sorry, I don't buy your terminology. You say the "wall" absorbs "energy" . How does this absorbed energy manifest? It has to go somewhere. The hot gas might raise the wall temperature slightly, but the residence time is a few microseconds as it is diverted so that cannot account for much "energy". The gas velocity after hitting the wall is slightly reduced because of any heat loss, but it will be nearly the same as the impact velocity.
Energy in classical physics has no direction unit associated with it. Momentum does. I think the simple explanation for the recoil reduction is that the wall strips some of the powder gas from the total ejecta by diverting the gas sideways. Any reduction in the ejecta mass will cause a reduction in recoil. That is all there is to it. It is easily demonstrated with a ballistic pendulum.
RWO
Yes "BUT" notice the direction of the lower right arrow. The flow sheared off which is flow separation and the pressure differentials created, causes a reversion of the gasses, which is really just dead flow or space. Then you get into laminar and turbulent flow and Reynolds numbers and Adverse Pressure Gradients if we really want to.![]()
AH Ha! I did the finger under the water test and I have concluded there could be an advantage to screwing one of those water sprayer things the kids play with in the yard, onto the muzzle of a rifle. I studied up on fluid dynamics and the theory is good to go. All I need is some sun tan lotion, safety goggles, and one of those adds on Home Shopping. This is going to be HUGE!
Page 1 is on topic but I lost all interest when you guys started to discuss muzzle brakes etc.
LC
I'm amazed this thread is still going, crown design is interesting to me