M
mks
Guest
MUZZLE & TUNER AT EXIT.... This picture shows the orientation of the muzzle at the time of bullet exit, approximately 0.00092 seconds. It is pointing upward and the projection to the 100 yard target is still climbing. The projection stays near this position for about 0.0001 second. See the charts below.
Keith
I think you are misreading table 2.You want the barrels muzzle climbing at the time of bullet exit and table 2 shows the droop caused by gravity coupled with the rise for each velocity.The faster shots appear lower because the barrel hasn't risen as much as the slower shots due to more barrel time.The muzzle is still rising.
Waterboy aka Lynn
Lynn,
In the text you quoted, note Al says the muzzle is "pointing upward" and the "projection...is still climbing." He did not say that the "muzzle" is climbing.
Farther down the page:
SIMULATED 100 YARD TARGET.... This graph summarizes the data by showing where the barrel is pointing at the 100 yard target at the time the bullet exits the muzzle (top row). The bottom row shows where each bullet would strike the target by including the bullet drop due to the bullet's flight and the drop due to the downward velocity of the muzzle as the bullet exits.
The title of Table 2 is:
Table 2: Bullet Drop due to the Muzzle's Downward Velocity at the Time of Bullet Exit
In Table 2, columns 4 and 5, the "muzzle vertical velocities" are all negative, and are more negative for the slower shots (the wrong direction for compensating for slower bullet velocity). Columns 6 and 7 show that where the bullets strike the target (due to the downward velocity of the muzzle) drops for the slower shots.
The title of Table 3 also includes Downward Muzzle Velocity.
In the text below Table 3:
ADDING IT ALL TOGETHER.... Here are the results for the two Light Rifles firing the same five shot pressure curves. After including where the muzzle is pointing at the 100 yard target, the bullet drop for each shot's muzzle velocity, and finally the downward velocity of the swing of the muzzle as the bullet exits...
You can think of the barrel like cracking a whip. As the wave travels from the action to the muzzle, the muzzle first points slightly downward as it rises and reaches its highest position. Then it points upward as it falls. There is a phase lag between the muzzle angle and muzzle position.
Cheers,
Keith