Actually it is not the straight barrel that you are looking for. Let me explain. When you swing a baseball bat back and fourth and look at it in slow motion the spot that the bat is moving the slowest is that short dwell time of when you reverse directions to swing the other way. That short dwell time is much longer than the time the bat swings past the midway point (straight barrel) and when the the bat is swinging past the mid point it is moving faster as well. In theory if you have a velocity difference(bullet exit time) of 2% you would want that to happen in the spot where the swing is most motionless for the longest time. That spot is the turn around point and that is the max deflection in either direction. This is also why velocity has to be as tight between loads as possible.The guy who started the "10 shot velocity" development thing has said, once he finds a velocity that works with a particular barrel/bullet combo, that he can change powders as he wishes and as long as it delivers the same velocity he gets very similar precision. Makes sense if load development is about finding a node in the barrel vibration where the bullet exits the muzzle when the barrel as close to straight as possible - similar velocity may correlate with barrel retention timing. But who knows.
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