I'm gonna' take a stab at defining "stopping the muzzle"............ Lord Help Me
The way I see it is this........
Tie a rope to a tree.
Pull it out like a jump rope.
Shake it.
If you play with the "shake speed" and the tension you're "tuning" the rope just like a gun barrel. If you're good you can get the rope to settle into 2 or 3 or maybe even 4 or 5 "harmonized nodes" such that there will be several spots on the rope that you could touch with your finger and they would be "stopped"..............you could pinch the rope and not affect the nodes because they're effectively NOT MOVING. The anti-nodes on the other hand are flopping up and down in between each node.
What a tuner does is set the muzzle (actually the bullet exit point) right on a node either by extending a false muzzle FORWARD (heavy weight-forward tuner, Calfee) or by otherwise redirecting force OUTWARD ("focusing ring", Beggs) to achieve the same affect.
In both cases I find no reason (except butt-headed cantankerousity ) not to call the muzzle "stopped".......now the tricky little side bar to this "stopped" is that the barrel is actually bent just like a sine wave so that the "stopped" muzzle is like a ring with a slinky attached to it............when the slinky pipe (anti-node) behind it is DOWN then the bullet is launched UP through the muzzle. When the barrel behind the node is UP, the launch angle is DOWN through the "stopped" muzzle exit hole.
Thus, tuning.
Big Al,
The reason for the stepped mauser barrels was for ease of manufacture in wartime conditions, it had nothing to do with tuning. I got this from Franz Achleitner a third generation arms builder directly from Germany. He had folks in many of the actual mfgng plants.
al
The way I see it is this........
Tie a rope to a tree.
Pull it out like a jump rope.
Shake it.
If you play with the "shake speed" and the tension you're "tuning" the rope just like a gun barrel. If you're good you can get the rope to settle into 2 or 3 or maybe even 4 or 5 "harmonized nodes" such that there will be several spots on the rope that you could touch with your finger and they would be "stopped"..............you could pinch the rope and not affect the nodes because they're effectively NOT MOVING. The anti-nodes on the other hand are flopping up and down in between each node.
What a tuner does is set the muzzle (actually the bullet exit point) right on a node either by extending a false muzzle FORWARD (heavy weight-forward tuner, Calfee) or by otherwise redirecting force OUTWARD ("focusing ring", Beggs) to achieve the same affect.
In both cases I find no reason (except butt-headed cantankerousity ) not to call the muzzle "stopped".......now the tricky little side bar to this "stopped" is that the barrel is actually bent just like a sine wave so that the "stopped" muzzle is like a ring with a slinky attached to it............when the slinky pipe (anti-node) behind it is DOWN then the bullet is launched UP through the muzzle. When the barrel behind the node is UP, the launch angle is DOWN through the "stopped" muzzle exit hole.
Thus, tuning.
Big Al,
The reason for the stepped mauser barrels was for ease of manufacture in wartime conditions, it had nothing to do with tuning. I got this from Franz Achleitner a third generation arms builder directly from Germany. He had folks in many of the actual mfgng plants.
al