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#13 | ||||||
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Recoil is:
(wt of shot x muzzle velocity + 4700 x wt of powder charge) squared divided by 64.348 x wt of the gun in lbs. So, if you want less actual recoil, increase the wt of the gun, decrease the weight of the powder charge or decrease the shot charge. Chamber length or pressure is not in the formula and has nothing to do with actual recoil. If you want less felt recoil, get a gun with a straighter stock or add a recoil pad , slip on or fixed. Pressure in the barrels is a different formula. One can easily look up from p.515 TPS what Parker intended for service loads for the gun. For example, a Winchester 20ga 7/8, 2 1/2dre load results in pressures slightly below the Parker determined service load. Tables are provided in TPS which show the loads that Parker recommended for various weights and gauges of guns. A person can also determine commercial load pressures by backing in reloading data. The belief of short chambers creating high pressures was debunked by Sherman Bell in his DGJ Finding Out For Myself series by using actual testing using strain and pressure gauges and engineering analysis. Last edited by Bruce Day; 10-21-2010 at 02:29 PM.. |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Bruce Day For Your Post: |
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#14 | ||||||
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Bruce:
How about the weight of the wad ? ; ) |
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#15 | ||||||
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OOPS. My error. Thanks for the catch. I used a rifle formula. The wad wt is in there with the shot charge wt. Its basically everything in the hull that goes out the end of the barrel to produce an equal and opposite reaction.
So, if the question is how do I get less recoil, the answer, assuming the gun configuration remains constant, remains to use less shot or less powder or less velocity. The wad wt is pretty much a constant. Last edited by Bruce Day; 10-21-2010 at 02:31 PM.. |
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#16 | ||||||
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#17 | ||||||
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Bruce - I was just being a smart-*ss...
Compared to you guys, I'm fairly new to Parkers, and really new to low-pressure shells like RST. But one thing I must admit is this : If for no other reason (and since I no longer reload), I would shoot RST shells just because they pattern so well. Then, on top of that, the fact that they don't kick hard & don't beat up my gun makes it hard for me to even look at cheaper shells... It must be witchcraft ! |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to John Mazza For Your Post: |
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#18 | ||||||
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Definitely that!
If you want a really sweet twenty-gauge RST load give Morris a call and ask him for the shells he cooked up for Burt's Gun. Except for the sound I barely knew when these shells went off and the downrange effect was impressive. |
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#19 | ||||||
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Well its not witchcraft or rocket science or brain surgery. The easy answer is to just tell folks to buy RST shells, and I think they are great shells, and Morris and Alex are fine people and great PGCA supporters. However, I like to know the figures, like to know the loading data, like to know what my guns were made for and all those other details that are probably insignificant and even boring for many people. I like to load my own and I like knowing which commercial loads are available for my old guns. All that arcane and detailed BS, I kinda like it.......its probably just me.
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#20 | ||||||
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Nope, I think it's a wise thing to want to know what we're feeding our pets and pet guns.
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