G
gt40
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gt40 check your pms.
Got it Matt. Sent one back at ya.
gt40 check your pms.
Yeah, I think you're the only one. I had some worries about the repoint die-- never the meplat trimmer -- but they were removed when I got the Whidden. You can close the points as little as you like, testing along the way.And am I the only one worried about introducing defects with these extra operations?
Gotta be something going for pointing - besides hype. Why did Sierra go to that trouble of pointing their 155 grain 2156 .308 pill & kick up their & the shooters' costs if there wasn't a benefit?
Sure it's only got their BC up to round about the same as the 155s from Berger, Lapua & HBC but at least they're back in the ballgame.
RG, as I remember, McCoy later retracted that statement. I'm not familiar with the particular test by Henry Childs you're referring to, but I do remember he had one tip -- he was making his own tips and inserting them like the A-max & Nosler tips -- where it turned out the problem wasn't so much the sharpness of the point, but that particular aluminum tip was loading the bullet at the ogive/shank junction, which is weak.. . . As I recall - a dangerous proposition - McCoy pointed out that once the meplat diameter is below a defined percentage of caliber (sorry I cannot recall the %), 'accuracy' suffers . . . it seems that drag IS a stabilizing force. Mr. Childs extreme 'tipping' experiment may have provided empirical evidence that a SHARP point is undesirable. RG
Now Jim, you know, as I know, that the world churns. Had he taken you up on your offer, just as he broke the shot, a horsefly would have bitten him on the finger, and a gust of wind would blow the bullet even further off. But it wouldn't have mattered, because just at that moment, a tornado would set down and take him & his rifle to the top of a tree.. . . "With all the expense of this competition, and all my hard work, I would have paid anything for one more on-the-line X today." He could have had it for FREE as I had offered Jim
RG, as I remember, McCoy later retracted that statement. I'm not familiar with the particular test by Henry Childs you're referring to, but I do remember he had one tip -- he was making his own tips and inserting them like the A-max & Nosler tips -- where it turned out the problem wasn't so much the sharpness of the point, but that particular aluminum tip was loading the bullet at the ogive/shank junction, which is weak.
In spite of Jim Hardy's observations, and I listen to him as a serious shooter, more work is needed on all this.
Out of curiosity, what would the increase in BC be if, for example, you just changed the meplat diameter in the 108 BIB from (.052 is it?) to .010? All that ignoring for a moment that such a re-point would slightly change the ogive radius at the point, what's the theoretical increase in BC?
Charles
As I said in an earlier post, I *believe* McCoy later recanted that. Maybe Bryan would know?Specifically interesting is the section in McCoy's book on Drag. Although he's light on detail (and frustratingly references BRL reports that I have no idea how to get), it appears that there is likely an optimal meplat size (he suggests 0.1-0.15 calibers). Going sharper than that should raise drag.