Good thing we don’t fire the bullets and the case goes with it….Ive never seen a less useful and more hilarious diagram.
Dave
Good thing we don’t fire the bullets and the case goes with it….Ive never seen a less useful and more hilarious diagram.
I’m sure you are the first guy to study the boat tail shape….seems like a logical assumption. I’m sure Berger and Sierra never once thought about the boat tail shape and never performed any CFD on their proposed bullet shapes. Your posts are awesome, please keep them coming, this is exactly what I need in my life right now.I think they eventually will. Or maybe I just hope they will. About 50% of rifle bullet drag is due to the base flow problems. About 120 years of study has gone into the nose design but I'm the first knucklehead to attack the base flow with math.
Less drag means a flatter trajectory (less drop) and less wind error. IT also extends the effective range of the weapon. I estimate that I could extend the effective range of the M4 out to over 500m with a aerospike tail.
send me a free box of 50 of the 6.5mm pills and I would be glad to shoot them against a similar competition bullet (although 102gr is a little light for a 6.5CM competition bullet, 140gr ELD-M pills would be more appropriate).That is why I'm trolling this forum. I think there is a great amount of experience here. If I can get y'all shooting these then I can use the feedback to optimize them.
I'd run'm against a 108 scenar, and have complete confidence in the scenar.I’m sure you are the first guy to study the boat tail shape….seems like a logical assumption. I’m sure Berger and Sierra never once thought about the boat tail shape and never performed any CFD on their proposed bullet shapes. Your posts are awesome, please keep them coming, this is exactly what I need in my life right now.
Dave
send me a free box of 50 of the 6.5mm pills and I would be glad to shoot them against a similar competition bullet (although 102gr is a little light for a 6.5CM competition bullet, 140gr ELD-M pills would be more appropriate).
I can’t believe you are trying to sell a new bullet design and your website doesn’t have a single shred of comparative testing showing actual results on target. Do you just expect everyone to take your word for it??
Dave
Furnish a few thousand to some of the guys here and maybe you will get some feed backThat is why I'm trolling this forum. I think there is a great amount of experience here. If I can get y'all shooting these then I can use the feedback to optimize them.
That's enough to make me wish I was a kid again.So gangster!!
ChrisCraft and beautiful wood is what comes to my mind.
Looking at the drawing it appears there is a a pointed cylinder that extends forward. Heck I don't know anything....Nope, no moving parts. Just a weird little curved shape in the back. I'm still using full powder loads and regular reloading gear.
LOLWhy not make a bullet with a pointy ass?
Why is it called “taking” a piss when you are actually leaving it in the toilet?Why are they called pigtails?
I don't think I have ever seen a bullet shaped like the one in figure 20. Is this a development I missed? WHThe area behind a bullet is called the wake or recirculation region. It is responsible for about 50% of the drag on a boattail.
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I don’t think that’s a real depiction of a bullet shape. It’s probably a textbook drawing made by someone attempting to show the flow that has no concept of what a real bullet was shaped like. It looks obvious to me that what they thought a “bullet” was is what we would call a “cartridge”.I don't think I have ever seen a bullet shaped like the one in figure 20. Is this a development I missed? WH
Playing the devils advocate here…
Accuracy is the name of the game, not distance of trajectory. And unfortunately, regardless of boat tail design, I just don’t see how an all copper bullet will ever outshoot a good match grade lead core bullet at long range. Many have tried and failed. So unless you can figure out how to stuff some lead or other heavy metal in the aerospike bullets to give them good rotating mass at the axis, you might be fighting and uphill battle both ways to get in the game at this point.
I'm Dr. John Stutz and I teach ballistics to engineers and scientists.
I don't teach ballistics to anyone and very fast twist is undefined, but ..................... duhI know BRL has done a bunch of studies on making really long boatails to reduce drag. Most of the designs are unstable unless you use a very fast twist.