Brian in Montana
Well-known member
I understand that heavier-for-caliber bullets tend to be longer and require a faster twist to stabilize. Does that necessarily mean that a fast twist wouldn't stabilize a lighter bullet well?
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This does make sense to me. It seems there would be something of an optimal spin to stabilize a given bullet, not heavy and light, but I don't know a lot about that.I have zero evidence or experience with this but I'm read a bullet spinning too fast is unstable (something like 1 degree off axis which isn't probably noticed at 100 yards), causes excess spindrift at distance, and/or can separate at the muzzle if the jacket is thin.
Wow, that's screaming. I like it.I ran a 8” twist 220 Swift Ackley 4400fps with a 40 grain nosler ballistic tip and never had accuracy issues.
Greenhill’s formula can be used to supposedly calculate the optimal twist rate for a bullet. Over stabilization doesn’t seem to be a much of a problem in the real world though.This does make sense to me. It seems there would be something of an optimal spin to stabilize a given bullet, not heavy and light, but I don't know a lot about that.
Barrel was toasted pretty quickWow, that's screaming. I like it.
I have zero evidence or experience with this but I'm read a bullet spinning too fast is unstable (something like 1 degree off axis which isn't probably noticed at 100 yards), causes excess spindrift at distance, and/or can separate at the muzzle if the jacket is thin.
I understand that heavier-for-caliber bullets tend to be longer and require a faster twist to stabilize. Does that necessarily mean that a fast twist wouldn't stabilize a lighter bullet well?
Greenhill’s formula can be used to supposedly calculate the optimal twist rate for a bullet. Over stabilization doesn’t seem to be a much of a problem in the real world though.
I hadn't heard of Bergers "blowing up".
I had read that they went to a thicker jacket due to fliers at the end of a string, caused by the hot chamber/barrel causing core/jacket separation.
"Blowup" is usually associated to the "bad old days" of bullet development.