Maybe just write down the mathematical formula. It can't be that long.... ....And any technical issue involving variables can be mathematically shown.... Or maybe an internet link.....?acloco wrote:BCB - lol (on the writer's cramp)
It would be too much typing to provide the info....
I will let it be..........
Or better yet, come down to south Texas and I'll help you swage some 38 grain 20 caliber bullets with a jacket that is too long for the bullets to stabilize in a 12" twist 204 Ruger rifle - yours or mine. It's not a hard thing to do - I've done it. They'll be just a tad longer (a few thousands of an inch) than a 40 grain V-Max.
And then we'll shorten up the length of the bullet jacket and I'll let you build some 38 grain HP 20 caliber bullets (notice same weight) that will be very accurate in yours or my 204 Ruger rifles. We'll even fill up that same length bullet jacket with lead to the bullet jacket tip and find that they weigh about 42 grains and that they too shoot very well in a 12" twist 20 caliber barrel. (I've done that, too). We can even put a lead tip on the bullet which makes the entire bullet even a little bit longer and heavier (about 43.5 grains) and it too will stabilize in a 12'"twist barrel.
We'll even use the same bullet jacket length and let you build some 28-37 grain bullets and shoot them in our 12" twist barrels also so you can see that even though the length of the lead core changed significantly in relation to the jacket length, these bullets all were stabilized in a 12" twist barrel too.
And then we'll sit under a shade tree with a six pack of Shiner Bocks and you can 'splain to me how bullet weight affected which bullets would stabilize in a 12" twist barrel and which wouldn't. Let me know before hand so I can get the Shiner Bock on ice. It stays warm all year 'round down here...
-BCB