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yeah that one. not talking about a curved trajectory.
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Originally Posted by mgeoffriau
(Post 746347)
It wouldn't be curving the bullet path, it would be swinging the gun fast enough that the can is moved into the (straight) path of the bullet before the bullet clears the end of the can.
EDIT: Before I get challenged for saying the bullet travels in a straight path, I do understand ballistics. I'm treating it as a straight path since we're talking about distances of 6"-8" from the end of the muzzle. |
Originally Posted by mgeoffriau
(Post 746347)
It wouldn't be curving the bullet path, it would be swinging the gun fast enough that the can is moved into the (straight) path of the bullet before the bullet clears the end of the can.
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Originally Posted by fooger03
(Post 746353)
If you could acccelerate (not move) the barrel of the gun fast enough while simultaneously shooting the bullet,
And yeah, this is purely academic- like arguing that if you stand still long enough you will be crushed to death by tectonic plate movement as the continent changes shape around you. |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 746356)
And yeah, this is purely academic- like arguing that if you stand still long enough you will be crushed to death by tectonic plate movement as the continent changes shape around you.
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Let's assume we're using subsonic ammo (since we're shooting it through a suppressor, we're trying to be as quiet as possible, right?) that has a muzzle velocity of roughly 1,000 ft/s.
Let's also assume the suppressor extends 6 inches from the end of the muzzle. 0.5 ft / 1,000 ft/s = 0.0005 seconds So, you have 1/2000 of a second to swing the tip of the suppressor far enough into strike the exiting bullet. Let's be generous and say the internal diameter of the suppressor is 0.30 inches. That leaves a little less than 0.04 inches on either side of perfectly center .22LR bullet (since the bullet is actually .222 in diameter). So you have 0.0005 seconds to swing the tip of the can 0.04 inches. 0.04 inches is 0.003333333 feet. 0.003333333 feet / 0.0005 seconds = 6.666666 ft/s So you'll have to move the tip of the can sideways at roughly 6.67 ft/s to risk a baffle strike. If I got all that right I'll be amazed. |
Originally Posted by mgeoffriau
(Post 746364)
Let's assume we're using subsonic ammo (since we're shooting it through a suppressor, we're trying to be as quiet as possible, right?) that has a muzzle velocity of roughly 1,000 ft/s.
Let's also assume the suppressor extends 6 inches from the end of the muzzle. 0.5 ft / 1,000 ft/s = 0.0005 seconds So, you have 1/2000 of a second to swing the tip of the suppressor far enough into strike the exiting bullet. Let's be generous and say the internal diameter of the suppressor is 0.30 inches. That leaves a little less than 0.04 inches on either side of perfectly center .22LR bullet (since the bullet is actually .222 in diameter). So you have 0.0005 seconds to swing the tip of the can 0.04 inches. 0.04 inches is 0.003333333 feet. 0.003333333 feet / 0.0005 seconds = 6.666666 ft/s So you'll have to move the tip of the can sideways at roughly 6.67 ft/s to risk a baffle strike. If I got all that right I'll be amazed. |
Don't forget, since the tip of the suppressor is extended (huhuhuhuhu) away from your wrist, it will accelerate quicker than your wrist..
lol. Thats a stretch. Love the math! |
The only thing is, you have to start swinging after the bullet left the barrel but before it exited the suppressor. which is a window of 0.0005 seconds.
good luck superman. |
Goddamn shame they're wasting all this fab work and engineering on a drift car:
http://ll.speedhunters.com/u/f/eagam...mike1/mm01.jpg http://ll.speedhunters.com/u/f/eagam...mike1/mm24.jpg http://ll.speedhunters.com/u/f/eagam...mike1/mm05.jpg http://speedhunters.com/archive/2011...ered-pt-1.aspx |
Originally Posted by soviet
(Post 746389)
The only thing is, you have to start swinging after the bullet left the barrel but before it exited the suppressor. which is a window of 0.0005 seconds.
good luck superman. http://funny-pictures-blog.com/wp-co...funny_crab.jpg |
Originally Posted by pusha
(Post 746391)
Goddamn shame they're wasting all this fab work and engineering on a drift car:
http://ll.speedhunters.com/u/f/eagam...mike1/mm01.jpg |
because drift car?
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Originally Posted by Oscar
(Post 746398)
because drift car?
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Originally Posted by soviet
(Post 746389)
The only thing is, you have to start swinging after the bullet left the barrel but before it exited the suppressor. which is a window of 0.0005 seconds.
good luck superman. Think of a more extreme example -- say we had a 10 foot long suppressor attached to the muzzle. Do you see how swinging the pistol and firing would easily lead to a baffle strike? It's the same situation with a 6 inch suppressor, you just have less time before the bullet clears, so the pistol has to be swung proportionally faster. |
Originally Posted by Oscar
(Post 746398)
because drift car?
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Attachment 187585
Edit: It seems my picture editing and uploading skills aren't quite fast enough to beat simple typing yet :P |
Originally Posted by Gearhead_318
(Post 746402)
BANNED :loser:
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Originally Posted by Oscar
(Post 746404)
I think not my friend :fawk:
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:hahano: Well well well...
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