By Cthulhu on Sunday, June 28, 1998 - 12:51 am:
To Jymz,
Sorry to hear about your car, but you need to lighten up. I don't think less of you as a human because you don't agree with what I say.
I was pointing out the irony in implying your background hang gliding taught you about rifling. I can just see the gliders spiraling through the air;) It was a joke.
I also corrected your remark that high velocity is required to impart rifling marks on projectiles. This is untrue. I'm not playing the expert, just stating fact. Just to clear things up, the bullets were fired into ordanance gelatin, not Jello. Jymz probably knows what this means, but I'll elaborate for those who don't. It is a substance that is used to simulate human tissue for ballistic testing, and is used by the military and cartridge companies. Water is not as accurate but is also used.
I worked for a specialty ammunition producer and I'm fairly familiar with real bullets and the effects of various types and rates of rifling (polyagonal, 12 groove, Microgroove, 4 groove, etc), but I'm no expert. I agree that even shallow slow rifling will induce a spin. So will a smooth barrel, but there is a minimum spin rate for stability, which varies with the weight and cross sectional density of the bullet. Shallow rifling won't work with bullets, lead round balls don't seem to need it.
I didn't post to impress people with my knowledge. I was trying to make the point that Airsoft bb's aren't bullets. Nor are paintballs. All too often people post tech info that is factually wrong, sometimes by just using the incorrect nomenclementure, and other readers who don't know anything about firearms take it as gospel. Then they use firearm and airsoft info interchangeably.
As Eyegun pointed out, BBs are massed produced and made as cheaply as possible. Even the TM's and other premium BBs have cracks, seams, air bubbles, and are far from round. Paintballs suffer the same fate, plus a liquid fill to add to the problems. Given the plastic BBs and low velocity's involved, it is my OPINION that cork screw rifling is not the way to increase accuracy.
To Jymz, or anyone who wishes to persue the rifling the airsoft barrels, you may want to read Understanding Ballistics and Hatcher's Notebook. Both have entire chapters on the ballistics of round balls, and the various types of rifling.
As for the "barrel suck" of paintball barrels, this site might have some info that can be applied to softs. www.paintcheck.com/articles/protips/range.html
Feel free to flame me if you think I'm babbling ;)
By Almighty on Sunday, June 28, 1998 - 08:28 am:
Cthulhu..
Thanks for the address of Paintcheck. It proves useful in proving my point about perforated barrels. The holes are there in order to keep the ball velocities within acceptable standards, and has nothing to do with range or ball stability.
I wish though that JLove had something on barrels that taper wider at the muzzle. This is something that paintball has not tried, but is now the norm in airsoft.
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airsoft models. Anything you do with airsoft is at your own risk!