Alex Wheeler
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Heres some good reading if you havent seen it yet.
http://www.varmintal.com/atune.htm
http://www.varmintal.com/atune.htm
I’ve looked through that write up before and honestly most of it is over my head even though I have an advanced science degree. :zfastmalibu said:Heres some good reading if you havent seen it yet.
http://www.varmintal.com/atune.htm
seymour fish said:Is it safe to say that short-range barrels (short fat relatively Stiff) with higher vibratory frequency are optimal as 1) there is no need for positive compensation a la Varmint Al at point-blank range 2) With nodes so close together, they shoot well dumping powder, inaccurately by long-range standards, without seeming to be slaves to ES/SD, just running at a speed range where the system is known to be happy given atmospherics ? Perhaps it follows that longrange barrels though fat, are of necessity long, thus less stiff relatively, and operate at sufficiently low frequency to allow tuning into those wide nodes that Mike mentions, to benefit from positive compensation ? Seems a fair synopsis of expert opinion. Seymour
What are you meaning by a stiff barrel? A 1.250 straight or a 1.450 straight. Some of the best knots and groups I ever saw were shot with 1.450 straight barrels at 30 inches glued into 9 inch blocks. I would think that is about as stiff as it gets. Unless you are Eddie and use 2 inch barrels. These barrels including Eddies have shot extremely small. Maybe they are harder to tune but I seen them shoot really small and consistently do it. Mattzfastmalibu said:seymour fish said:Is it safe to say that short-range barrels (short fat relatively Stiff) with higher vibratory frequency are optimal as 1) there is no need for positive compensation a la Varmint Al at point-blank range 2) With nodes so close together, they shoot well dumping powder, inaccurately by long-range standards, without seeming to be slaves to ES/SD, just running at a speed range where the system is known to be happy given atmospherics ? Perhaps it follows that longrange barrels though fat, are of necessity long, thus less stiff relatively, and operate at sufficiently low frequency to allow tuning into those wide nodes that Mike mentions, to benefit from positive compensation ? Seems a fair synopsis of expert opinion. Seymour
Yes, stiffness of a barrel/rifle is directly related to positive compensation. Stiff works at short range, at long range you need some flex to get that possitive compensation. stiff, low profile rifles seem popular, but they are not ideal in long range.
Jlow, yes that correct
dkhunt14 said:What are you meaning by a stiff barrel? A 1.250 straight or a 1.450 straight. Some of the best knots and groups I ever saw were shot with 1.450 straight barrels at 30 inches glued into 9 inch blocks. I would think that is about as stiff as it gets. Unless you are Eddie and use 2 inch barrels. These barrels including Eddies have shot extremely small. Maybe they are harder to tune but I seen them shoot really small and consistently do it. Mattzfastmalibu said:seymour fish said:Is it safe to say that short-range barrels (short fat relatively Stiff) with higher vibratory frequency are optimal as 1) there is no need for positive compensation a la Varmint Al at point-blank range 2) With nodes so close together, they shoot well dumping powder, inaccurately by long-range standards, without seeming to be slaves to ES/SD, just running at a speed range where the system is known to be happy given atmospherics ? Perhaps it follows that longrange barrels though fat, are of necessity long, thus less stiff relatively, and operate at sufficiently low frequency to allow tuning into those wide nodes that Mike mentions, to benefit from positive compensation ? Seems a fair synopsis of expert opinion. Seymour
Yes, stiffness of a barrel/rifle is directly related to positive compensation. Stiff works at short range, at long range you need some flex to get that possitive compensation. stiff, low profile rifles seem popular, but they are not ideal in long range.
Jlow, yes that correct
ShootDots said:I would bet I have had chambered over 100 barrels in various calibers from .223 all the way to a .358 S.T.A. In all those barrels I have had 2 for sure and maybe 3, that would be considered R-E-A-L "hummers". One was a .257 Roberts A.I. , one was a 6.5 x 47 and the "possible" was a .308. They were all 26" with various contours. Two of them were Rock Creeks and one was a Krieger. It mattered not what you put down the bore, as far as projectiles were concerned, they all just hammered, with almost no tuning! I think you could have run stones down those barrels and they would have hammered!
Having said the above, I do not believe that contour or length (that is length within reason) has very much to do with the accuracy potential of a given barrel. How the barrel steel was made, drilled, rifling cut and straightness of the barrel has more to do with the potential for accuracy than contour does.
Over the last year or so I've listened to some who say that "XXX" is the best "profile" for accuracy in a given caliber.
My question revolves around the .308 using a 175 gr bullet (SMK, TMK, or even 178 A-Max).