Jim Wheeler
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2014
- Messages
- 904
whahaha,,! oops ! no offence,,but funny !So which dorm were you in at Hogwarts?
Last edited by a moderator:
whahaha,,! oops ! no offence,,but funny !So which dorm were you in at Hogwarts?
thats about right,, no one can eel the diffs im sure,,So the physics isn’t wrong, just in my opinion the pressure increase is not significant enough to be felt by the shooter regarding the pressures we use with shotguns. As I have no proof that it cant be felt I wont argue the point just proffer an opinion on that bit.
also , about right,I would have thought that the maximum recoil is due to the pressure of the charge over coming the inertia of the load.
The maximum peak pressure is irrelevant for the 2nd recoil it’s the pressure increase at the muzzle just as the gas is about to leave. If the expanding is all done, then it would become a vacuum as the shot tries to travel down the barrel, the wad would then be travelling slower than the shot as its sucked back. What actually happens is the expanding is at a lot slower rate so the pressure drops but it is still exerting a force. People think it’s done and dusted because in the terms of added velocity to the shot down the barrel it is. In the terms of creating pressure due to the wad slowing or a blockage it’s not always.Not that I am any great physics buff but I actually don't think so. The pressure is going to be a maximum at some point before the wad leaves the gun there after it is reducing so the maximum recoil will be evident when the pressure is at it highest value... that is going to happen before the wad leaves the barrel of the gun not after. I would have thought that the maximum recoil is due to the pressure of the charge over coming the inertia of the load. The actual expansion of the powder burning and becoming a gas has very often done all its expanding before the total volume of the barrel is filled in many weapons, don't know about a shotgun to be honest, but it has already been accelerated the load to huge velocity over a very short distance.
I actually don't think a solid propellant rocket motor can in anyway be compared to what happens in a shotgun barrel really other than that a solid is turned into a gas.
edit
This may or may not be pertinent to the analogy you are using but take this scenario. Take to identical cartridges in terms of propellant load but one has no load or wad the other a 28g load skirt wad fire both gun back to back with the cartridges chosen at random...which of the two will exhibit the most recoil? I would say the cartridge with the 28g skirt wad would be the one the other would be greatly rudced by comparison so my inclination is that you won't feel the recoil by gases leaving that barrel of the gun after the wad has left because as a component of the total recoil it is very small .
Try not to ridicule things you don't understand, find someone to explain "over boring" for you!So which dorm were you in at Hogwarts?
To prove my point on this you don’t even need to believe in the moon landings. Just buy a couple of bottle rockets on bonfire night then ignite the gunpowder contained in the cardboard tube of the rocket.my head hurts ....... a lot.
ps
I do not believe the moon landings actually happened, the whole idea is just silly. Just saying.
Tell ya what - you show me how 28ga, 20ga, 16ga, and 12ga recoil effects are measured as different for the same MV and same shot load in similar weight guns and I'll readily admit that Newton's Laws of Motion do not apply to guns.Try not to ridicule things you don't understand, find someone to explain "over boring" for you!
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