Quote:
Originally Posted by todd allen
Recoil is all about payload, vs velocity. Has nothing to do with pressure.
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BTW did not see Bruces replies when working up my stuff below. I guess I need to find the that recoil energy formula.
Interesting point on those variables. It has me thinking even more, rightly or wrongly involving the physics. Instead of focusing on pressure at powder ignition, then maybe we need to focus on the lbs per square inch exerted by the overall event as it relates to recoil and old wooden stocks. I think several have mentioned this point. If that is the case then it really comes down to the amount of powder and the size of the load. Thinking barrel gauge as fixed constant as the control then more powder and load then more recoil. Felt recoil then goes to weight of gun as it relates to size of load, since there is no real recoil reduction in an old side by side other than maybe adding pad at butt of the stock or reducing the size of the the overall load. No way would you mess with back boring the forcing cones. Makes sense. A three inch shell with more powder and shot would definitely kick more or have more recoil. The type of powder may not mean a whole lot though.
As I can remember from reloading days, and please active re-loaders and people more knowledgeable than me please advise, is that when we were experimenting and trying to create heavier loads with #6 shot for grouse we used slower burning powders and more of it. Again I guess the term the shooting industry lingo uses is progressive powder, meaning a longer continuous burn (I am dumbing it down probably calling it slower since we are talking fractions of a second for a full charge burn). These were 20 gauge loads that we were setting up with a little over an ounce of shot. I cannot remember how much more powder. All I know is that gun kicked more and made a little more boom. Was it an effective load, could not tell but it had more shot in the pattern at 40 yards using a modified left barrel Definitely was not a square load. Shot string was probably awful, but we did not care since we just wanted to sling more shot through cover at a bird going away from us that we already had missed with the right barrel. Parting shot with a bang. I did take a few birds with them, but it may not have mattered what I was shooting at them, but it felt like I accomplished something with the suped up load.
Ya know you gotta love Hollywood though. No wonder you can't find many old 12 gauge or 10 gauge shotguns without stock issues. Cracks me up every time I see the shotgun blast scene from movie Open Range. Lets see giving the bad guy both barrels through a 1x8 board wall still has enough power to pick up a grown man and sling him 15 feet in the air off his feet. I like the scene that has Duvall looking through the hole after the shot. Why the hell has Robert Duvall not been thrown through the other wall from the recoil. I have heard it said it was not Samuel Colt that really won the West, it was the shotgun. If you want to skip to the shotgun scene I think it starts at about 3:55
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2YKFVGPUskg
Anyway through all this I don't know if there is a right or wrong answer. I think as a hedge I will do more research on the RST loads as to how much powder they use and how much shot for their spreader loads, which is probably what I need to shoot anyway due to chokes. Best I can tell they don't make a 2 3/4, 16 Ga. shell and they are only 2 1/2 inch cartridges. Maybe I need to get back into reloading my own. All I know is that depending on gauge size and loads, length of cartridge should not matter if barrel is designed to take that cartridge, in theory. Which then puts me back at original question posed. What sized charge and load is safe to shoot and at what velocity. I mean in theory and practicality you could reduce powder charge alot and really lower the amount of shot to the point that they just about roll out the barrel.
Putting things in perspective and doing the math, 1 fps is equal to .682 mph at about 1200 fps at the muzzle that means load is traveling at about 818 mph. At 1100 fps means that at muzzle the load is traveling at 750 mph. That represents only an 8.3% reduction in velocity, no matter the size of the load. I don't think anyone recommend shooting a load at less than 1100 fps, not even RTS or Polywad. So they offer different load sizes and different velocities but still offer 1 ounce loads at over 1100 fps meaning they have to have the right powder charge for that sized gauge barrel to produce the velocities no matter how long the cartridge is, meaning they have to shoot about the same sized powder charge as some so called modern loads using smokeless powder. BTW I have some 20 ga AA 7/8 loads that are rated at 1300 fps which is 886 mph. Putting it into perspective 1100 to 1300 does not look like much difference but its about 136 mph different, thats pretty fast in my book and I could see why you would not want 136 mph more speed blowing through an old gun. To achieve these speeds they need more charge.