NesikaChad
Well-Known Member
One must never forget one little thing about long skinny bullets.
RPM and twist rates, although not the same thing, share a symbiont relationship
You calculator geniuses should make pretty quick work of this. Lets wave a magic wand and speculate that a 338 or 378 squished down to 7mm will dabble in the high 3000 to low 4000 fps velocity figures. Any "lawn dart" weight 7mm bullet is going to require a pretty aggressive twist rate to stabilize properly.
At these kinds of velocities the bullet will be buzzing along somewhere in the neighborhood of 300,000 rpm.
It's a tall order for the jacket of any bullet to tolerate this kind of centrifugal force. A guy can slow the twist a bit to compensate but I think the gun becomes a bit more fussy as to what it'll shoot well.
Just something to consider before whippin out that checkbook.
Good luck.
Hey Jan, go shoot your gun!
RPM and twist rates, although not the same thing, share a symbiont relationship
You calculator geniuses should make pretty quick work of this. Lets wave a magic wand and speculate that a 338 or 378 squished down to 7mm will dabble in the high 3000 to low 4000 fps velocity figures. Any "lawn dart" weight 7mm bullet is going to require a pretty aggressive twist rate to stabilize properly.
At these kinds of velocities the bullet will be buzzing along somewhere in the neighborhood of 300,000 rpm.
It's a tall order for the jacket of any bullet to tolerate this kind of centrifugal force. A guy can slow the twist a bit to compensate but I think the gun becomes a bit more fussy as to what it'll shoot well.
Just something to consider before whippin out that checkbook.
Good luck.
Hey Jan, go shoot your gun!