:whisper: ...nobody mention the laser...
In a "conventional" gun the bullet has a velocity of zero before ignition occurs. So at ignition that bullet starts losing velocity? From zero? Negative velocity? :?In conventional guns, a bullet loses velocity from the moment the gunpowder ignites and sends it flying. The railgun projectile instead gains speed as it travels the length of a 32-foot barrel, exiting the muzzle at 4,500 miles an hour, or more than a mile a second.
Yeah, it's called recoil. That's why they have those compensator ports on the barrel shroud. It makes the bullet go to warp speed as soon as your shoulder thingie starts to go up.moe mensale said:In a "conventional" gun the bullet has a velocity of zero before ignition occurs. So at ignition that bullet starts losing velocity? From zero? Negative velocity? :?
They have it right. After the acceleration caused by the ignition of the propellant, the round loses velocity as it travels down the barrel.In a "conventional" gun the bullet has a velocity of zero before ignition occurs. So at ignition that bullet starts losing velocity? From zero? Negative velocity? :?
Okay, but that's not what they said.RedLeg17 said:After the acceleration caused by the ignition of the propellant, the round loses velocity as it travels down the barrel.
Is that why shorter barrels have higher muzzle velocity?They have it right. After the acceleration caused by the ignition of the propellant, the round loses velocity as it travels down the barrel.
F = (P x A) - FrictionThey have it right. After the acceleration caused by the ignition of the propellant, the round loses velocity as it travels down the barrel.
I think the point was that with a railgun the force on the projectile is constant over the length of the barrel. With a chemical propellant it tapers off.F = (P x A) - Friction
A = F / M
V = 1/2 A x t^2
A bullet continues accelerating until the frictional force exceeds the force caused by gas pressure. Generally, until it leaves the barrel, at which point F = 0
No, it does NOT! It accelerates continually until it exits the barrel.They have it right. After the acceleration caused by the ignition of the propellant, the round loses velocity as it travels down the barrel.
Yes, right up until he penned this tripe...this was interesting...
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2003/MichaelTse.shtml
That's Feinstein thinking.... if bullet prices were raised to $5,000 each, there would be a drastic decrease in murders ...
I would be one rich SOB.if bullet prices were raised to $5,000 each, there would be a drastic decrease in murders"
They would simply be expanding the product market for drug dealers.That's Feinstein thinking.
No, there would be a drastic increase in ammo theft.
Not all railguns operate purely an electromagnetic field. Some use a thin layer of conductive propellant attached to the rear of the projectile, similar to the experimental designs for a caseless cartridge.Since there is no gunpowder, what's up with the muzzle flash? Gas compression and release as it exits the barrel?