Bob Kingsbury
New member
What happens to a bullet, say solid copper that is given an SG
of say 3. Assuming it is a perfect bullet, what will it do
of say 3. Assuming it is a perfect bullet, what will it do
Some shooters are using 6mm barrels with a 15" twist instead of the normal 14" inch twist. This will reduce the dispersion due to bullet CG offset by about 7% and may reduce your group size by as much as 5%-6% assuming CG offset is the major cause of dispersion. It will also reduce GS from 1.4 to 1.2 under normal conditions and the performance may be erratic under unfavorable atmospheric conditions
. Under normal conditions the dispersion caused by the corkscrew motion by itself is too small compared to other error sources to worry about, but can become an enormous effect at excessively low gyroscopic stability fctors (GS<1.1).
This isn't calculating CG offset, which cannot be calculated or predicted(unless put there in a test), but must be measured.I can give Vaughn's formula for for calculating CG offset, replacing the Greek symbols with words in curly brackets:
{sigma} = 24{pi} (V/t) (TOF) {delta}
where
{sigma} = bullet deflection in inches, radius of dispersion, or miss distance.
Your posted formula is for dispersion caused by CG offset, once known.
It isn't the total amount of mass, it is the difference in the center of mass from the physical center. As there would be less lead, assuming the source of the offset is the jacket, the CG offset would be greater with less lead -- that for one caliber. When you compare a .30 to a 6mm, I'm less sure, but I think the center of mass offset would be even better with the .30Now, given a 6mm and jackets with all the same runout and same length. Wouldn't bullets made with a shorter core ( less lead) offer less CG offset ? There is certainly less mass in the offset.