Williaida will have your head spinning !That would be WILLIADA on OZFclass
Here's a link to another thread:
http://forum.accurateshooter.com/th...xpanding-mandrel.3928426/page-2#post-37000794
Post #28 lists web sites/pages with good information. Some pages explain how positive compensation of barrel whip to bullet exit makes accuracy at longer ranges better than at mid ranges.
I've done a few tests at 1000 yards shooting 308 Win and two 30 caliber magnums slung up in prone chronographing each shot. 'Twas interesting to see some bullets strike above call with slower velocities 10 feet from the muzzle than others. And some of the faster ones struck below call. Not much in either direction; only 5 to 8 inches from call. With a hold area of 5 to 7 inches diameter, add those numbers to get the group size in best conditions for environment as well as shooter skills.
I think the small spread in bullet BC caused by the normal, microscopic unbalance they all have that made some nutate their tips a bit more about trajectory axis than the really well balanced ones. More unbalanced ones will have more drag and lower BC so they'll strike lower than perfectly balanced ones leaving at the same fps number with highest BC; all relative to the point of call.
Of course, none of us shoulder a rifle exactly the same after reloading each shot and that causes bullets to leave in a greater cone of fire. Match rifles shot from machine rests or F class positions may shoot half MOA at 1000 yards; best us humans can shoot them slung up in prone without artificial support (bags and bipods) is 1 to 2 MOA in good conditions.
Years ago, a friend (7X Nat'l Champ) spun a few hundred Lapua 30 caliber D46 185-gr. rebated base FMJBT bullets in a collet chucked in a Dremel Moto Tool. An ampmeter was connected in series with the power cord. Bullets out of balance spinning 30K rpm drew more current than those perfectly balanced. They loaded the bearings with more centrifugal force. As I remember, a tool and die maker at Sierra Bullets made the collet to fit the Moto Tool. Some bullets were enough out of balance they flew out of the collet then bounced off walls and ceilings before coming to rest on the shop floor.
He took several dozen of the "perfect" ones to test in his Win 70 Hart barreled 308 Win match rifle clamped in a machine rest pointed at the 600 yard target. He shot several 10-shot groups ranging from 1.5 inch down to .7 inch. Then put one 40-shot group into 1.91 inch. The few unbalanced ones he shot ranged from 3" groups to about 15" ones. No wonder there were several fliers in each 100-round box.
Most interesting was his using a 50X optical comparitor looking at bullet ogive shapes across all. Four distinct different shapes were seen. Proof that four different bullet ogive forming dies different machines were used making that lot of ammo; no tool maker's bullet forming dies are exactly the same for a given bullet. Not surprising as Lake City and Frankfort arsenal's 30-06 and 7.62 match ammo had 3 or 4 different lots of bullets in each lot of ammo. No wonder the National Match lots shot just under 2 MOA in 600 yard accuracy tests. The best bullet machine's lots would shoot groups half that size if they were the only lot used in the ammo lot. No wonder military teams pulled the 173's from their match ammo then replaced them with Sierra 168's or 180's and get 4" test groups from their semiauto service rifles.... at 600 yards.
Certainly not impossible, I've seen it.In spite of the fact that some rifle barrels whip and wiggle in the vertical plane such that slower bullets leave at higher angles relative to the LOS than faster ones positively compensating for their greater drop at target range and therefore are more accurate at longer ranges, some claim that's impossible.
Certainly not impossible, I've seen it.
Good bullets go to sleep by the time they're 100 yards down range. But they don't change their trajectory path when that happens. The stay on the same path to start out but have higher BC's because their tips are not nutating (spinning in circles) about the trajectory axis.Harmonics? Bullet going to sleep?
This calls for another test!Good bullets go to sleep by the time they're 100 yards down range. But they don't change their trajectory path when that happens. The stay on the same path to start out but have higher BC's because their tips are not nutating (spinning in circles) about the trajectory axis.
It's harmonics; more correctly "positive compensation."
Get ahold of Mike Ezell. He is a very competent gunsmith and knows a lot about barrel harmonics and tuner related questions.for barrels to answer lingering questions to a build problem I have.