If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
It's Da' Spin,Boss! Da' Spin!
To all:
My mention, with regard to Hot Projects now on hold because I've been diagnosed with cancer, of fitting a Siler lock to a hunk of American Walnut which will become the stock of a blackpowder rifle caused narry a ripple from Groups familiar with such things but got me several questions from subscribers to other Groups including this one. As usual, a lot of the comments were negative, such as '...I can't see why someone would waste their time on black powder when they can buy a more accurate rifle for a lot less money..." Others couldn't understand why I was making a flinter when percussion caps were so much better. The interesting point here was their definition of 'better.' :-) But what prompts this message is the thought that the legendary accuracy of black-powder weapons was merely myth. This was presented to me by three or four folks who claimed to be experienced charcoal burners with years of experience with a variety of muzzle-loading weapons. My exposure to black powder dates from WWII when my cousin David and I were allowed to use a Civil War carbine to augment the amount of protein in our family's diet. This rifle, which used percussion caps, was used mostly as a shot gun, to take sitting ducks and geese since neither of us were strong enough to take them on the wing. Also, in so far as I know, there were no restrictions or rationing on black powder, bird-shot, and percussion caps. (We used newspaper for wadding.) But with regard to the issue of accuracy, my grandfather owned a high- precision black-powder target rifle of about .45 caliber that was capable of cutting a clover-shaped 3-shot group at 100 yards and our horribly mistreated Civil War smoke-pole was no slouch when used as a rifle, able to keep all of its shots in about a dinner-plate sized circle at 100 yards... once you'd doped the wind & drop. So where does this fabled accuracy come from? While there are many factors that contribute to the accuracy of a firearm, the main factor in this case has to do with the rifling. Black powder is a relatively low-energy propellant. The old rule of thumb for how much was needed when fring plain round balls was a conical pile of medium-fine grade black powder as high as the ball. Once that amount was determined you would adjust your powder-horn or measure to give you that amount for each shot. Measured with modern-day instruments, this old-fashioned rule of thumb produced a velocity of about 800 feet per second. The critical factor is the rifling, which is cut to give one revolution for every 10 inches of bore. Now here comes the tricky bits. 800 feet per second is 9600 inches per second With rifling off 10 to 1, that's 960 revolutions per second (rps) 960 rps is equal to 57,600 rpm ....and that is one HELL of a lot of stability imparted to that lead ball. Spinning at nearly 60,000 rpm it takes a major input of energy to deflect the ball. And unless the ball is deflected, it will fly true. And that's how you get that 'mythical' accuracy... and discover it isn't a myth at all. There's lots of reasons to NOT use a muzzle-loader... but accuracy isn't one of them. The reason most often give is the amount of work to just load the damn thing. The powder goes in first, your powder- wad, then the ball, then the ball-wad -- more newspaper. The weapon was then half-cocked and the pan charged with fine-grain priming powder, kept in the pan by the lid. The weapon could then be cocked and fired. When the trigger was pulled, the fall of the hammer drives the flint against the hardened-steel portion of the pan's cover, pushing the cover out of the way and generating a stream of sparks which fell into the charge of fine-grain priming powder causing it to ignite. The shape of the priming pan and the presence of a touch-hole though the side of the barrel... aligned with that portion of the barrel charged with gunpowder, ignites the gunpowder. Upon ignition the gunpowder drives the ball down the rifled bore of the barrel... and you've just joined the ranks of the Charcoal Burners of America. Is it fun? Damnbetcha, cowboy! :-) Modern muzzle-loaders offer a host of improvements over traditional cap & ball weapons and are miles above the more primitive 'Flinters'. But if you're into gunsmithing -- at any level -- it's nice to show how it all began, especially when training a youngster in the required safety procedures that must be observed with ANY firearm. By starting with basics, such as a flintlock rifle or pistol, it's pretty easy to show how each improvement carried with it the need for additional safety measures. That exposure, especially with regard to youngsters, provides a handy place to introduce them to the physics of the TONS of force needed to deflect a lead ball less than half an inch in diameter but spinning at nearly sixty THOUSAND rpm. -R.S.Hoover PS -- Here's one for you guys. Do you know of a rifle -- or even just a barreled action -- for the 7.62x39mm round? I'm not interested in an AK-47 (which uses this round) but its ballistics and the low price of the ammunition would appear to make it a good round for a light rifle, suitable for youngsters or women. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Spin ? | Mal | Soaring | 12 | April 3rd 06 06:23 AM |
How Low to Spin?? | Paul M. Cordell | Soaring | 180 | September 14th 04 07:17 PM |
Spin | Toks Desalu | Piloting | 43 | May 11th 04 01:04 PM |
Spin Training | Captain Wubba | Piloting | 25 | April 12th 04 02:11 PM |
Spin | K.P. Termaat | Soaring | 56 | February 11th 04 05:14 PM |