lynn..For best accuracy do you want the bullet to exit the muzzle on the upswing or downswing?
According to Varmint Al's work it should be on the upswing.
Is the muzzle deflecting downwards when the bullet leaves? and why is it deflecting downwards?
It will depend on the barrel length and velocity or time in barrel for the particular bullet and barrel you are asking about.
Does adding or changing the weight of the tuner make all the difference in the world? or does it really matter as long as you make weight?
Whether you make weight has no relation to what a tuner does or does not do, so your question makes no sense.
Does moving the tuners weight in or out a thread change the amount of weight as seen by the muzzle? In other words can you put a 1 pound weight on your outstretched arm and get the same affect as placing it on stick 10 feet away?
As you move the weight out you increase the moment about the muzzle. So, in this fashion I think it would meet your definition of "weight seen by tuner". Moving the weight out has somewhat the same EFFECT of adding weight.
Did Varmint Al think tuners were a plus or a waste of time?
V.A. didn't express his opinions. He simply gave you the results of his analysis, and let you make up you own mind.
If you can put two bullets through the same hole at 100 yards with a 8 grain variation in the powders charge weight(300 Ackley) is that huge variation in grouping ability associated with the weight of the tuner or is there some other factor we are not seeing?
That is ZERO variation in the group so there is nothing having effect!
If I am getting 3/4 of a bullet hole worth of vertical at 100 yards using a 308 bullet and turn my tuner 1/4 turn and get one hole groups what caused that to happen?
That's a .157 change in group size. If you could duplicate this and thus produce this as an average over a number of groups then I would say you have effected the change by your tuner.
If it is repeatable and it is why is that?
Obviously, it must be because of whatever change you made....or by some change that occurred that you weren't aware of.
On your guns with tuners what are you seeing with regards to group sizes while adjusting your tuner and is it in front of or behind the muzzle? and what if any difference can we expect to see between the two positions?
All the tuners I've tested have been out in front of the muzzle. I could never discern enough of a difference in accuracy that I could definitely say it was caused by the tuner. Maybe my guns or my ability to shoot them is just not at a high enough level! As to expected difference between the two positions I would expect some difference but it may be very hard to separate quantity of weight from position of the weight.
Gene beggs... Pacecil, were you there? Did you witness the experiment? In the real world, things don't always turn out as they do on paper and in computer generated models. Let's not nitpick the numbers to death; who cares? Regardless of how much the barrel actually grew, we can all agree it grew some; how's that?
Who cares! Well, I think most people who read this forum care! Your response that "it grew some" "who cares" is typical of too many people. You will take a number, any number, as long as it agrees with your theories or experiences! Your right I didn't see how he did his experiment, but I have the results of thousands of "experiments" done over the last few hundreds of years by thousands of testers that proved his was in error!
Whoa, whoa; hold on there Smokey, I can give you some numbers you can rely on! And I can tell you exactly what happens when you give my tuner a half turn, and I can tell you exactly how far it moves and I can tell you exactly where to place it when the ambient temperature increases to X degrees. I don't just throw out numbers and statements based on speculation; what I say, I have proven in the real world in actual conditions. I have come to have great respect for Varmint Al and his work but regardless of what his computer generated models show, I know for fact what happens in the real world.
Okay, lets see the numbers!
Bull! I never "sorta' changed" anything I said. I assure you, it IS changes in air density (weight) that causes our rifles to go out of tune, not barrel temperature and the reason you do not understand this is because you have never piloted highspeed aircraft. You have no appreciation for the enormous force of air at mach 2.7.
Okay, I'm no pilot and you are. Lets see you back up your theory or statement with some numbers or some test results.
Finally, Gene, you don't seem to understand whether I shoot or not, whether I'm a pilot or not, or whether you shoot or not, has nothing to do with what we are talking about here. We are talking about natural laws, as we understand them, that apply to most everything in this universe. Quit making this out as "you verses me"! I'm not telling you it's YOUR ambient air that's affecting the bullet's travel, or even that it's YOUR tuner that's affecting accuracy. Let's try and keep this from becoming so personal!