I agree with you that, powder being half or less of the weight of the projectile to begin with, and just reducing the powder by a small fraction, the total recoild reduction will be a small percentage. For some of us, that small reduction might be the difference on how many rounds we shoot in a particular session.Yes thank you both, as I said earlier I understand it has to have an effect.
My pause is on the definition of "good amount" when we are talking about likely saving less than or around 10 grains of powder on a 60-68 ish grain charge.
When looking at this formula if both bullet and velocity are the same from this theoretical situation and it's a 170 grain bullet @ 3000 with either a 60 grain charge or a 70 grain charge that's roughly 10-11% difference if charge velocity is constant.
Is charge velocity constant at a 20% pressure increase? My mind says probably not but I'm not sure
My point was as that formula states bullet mass and velocity are multiplied, while charge weight is multiplied by charge velocity then added
Given that charge weight is always the smallest of the variables here, it should have the least effect. Slightly more than dropping 10 grains in bullet weight, but not anything huge.
I said it before, I will not be buying one because of finances, however I do welcome every innovation, large or small.
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