I think you and Vibe hit the nail on the head. The predicted 0.006" growth of the barrel per 40 F change doesn't jibe with Gene's one turn (0.036" of tuner movement) over the same temperature change (George's measurements of 0.030" over 50.6 F also don't provide agreement). Moving the tuner in compensates mostly for the decrease in barrel exit time of the bullet. Increased barrel temperature decreases quenching of the charge, which increases MV and decreases exit time. Moving the tuner in increases the frequency of barrel vibrations to keep bullets with varying exit times leaving the barrel at the same range of points on the muzzle angle curve.
Cheers,
Keith
Keith, you, Vibe and certain others feel it is changes in barrel and powder temperature that is responsible for taking our rifles out of tune and I can understand why you would suspect that but I am quite sure that is not the case. Let me explain.
First let me point out that I have been pursuing this 100, 200 and 300 yard group shooting for over 22 years in actual competition at ranges all over the country. I have been searching for the answers to this tune thing hot and heavy and it only took me about twenty years to figure it out.
And I firmly believe I have finally got it figured out and results on the firing line in actual competition bear that out.
Oh,,, I don't shoot very well and you don't normally find my name very high on the match results because I spend too much time experimenting, building Wind Probes etc., instead of practicing, but my rifles shoot! And I can keep them in tune using only my tuner. Winning is just not that important to me. I get my satisfaction from unlocking nature's secrets and helping others. It tickles me to death when someone I have trained wins! Three good examples of this are Bryn Borras, Rod Brown and Matt Guthrie.
But back to our discussion,,
Keith, if it was only the temperature of the barrel and ammunition that was responsible for taking our rifles out of tune, we could control that with coolant jackets in the form of wet towels on the barrel, insulated containers etc., but that is not the case.
For some time, there were a good number of group shooters using barrel coolers that circulated ice water, alcohol etc., thru their barrels between relays and since we frequently fire only six to eight rounds in each match, the barrels were being kept plenty cool. The rifles still went out of tune!
Today, you rarely see a barrel cooler except maybe a wet towel draped over it between relays, so I guess keeping the barrels cool made no difference or all the winners would still be doing it.
But tuners? Now that's a different story.
They work!
And more and more shooters are discovering that.
Even ol' Francis! Imagine that!
Later
Gene Beggs