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06-25-2009, 03:19 PM | #21 |
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Being a long range, high power shooter, let's talk ballistics for a minute. Can a 9mm go 800 meters? Sure. Can it do so accurately? Prolly not. I regularly shoot .308 and 30.06 at 600 yds, and a 6.5 X 284 at 1000yds. Planning reloads, you have to keep the bullet supersonic til it hits. Generally 1100fps. Muzzle velocity on the .308/ 30.06 is in the 2500-2700fps range to do this, with a 175-190 gr. bullet. The 142 gr. bullet leaves the 6.5/284 at 3200+. A 9mm 115-125 gr. muzzle velocity is 11-1250?
A bullet that slows to subsonic will start to tumble, and weave around. It is still dangerous, and will do harm. But I think the French Helmet thing was propaganda. Probably worked as the treaty made them stop making artilleries. FN |
06-25-2009, 04:07 PM | #22 | |
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06-25-2009, 04:54 PM | #23 |
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The total range of a 9mm is within the 1200 - 1500 meters, for all I know this is a pretty well-researched fact. So with a total range of 1200 - 1500 meters, I fully expect 800 meters to be feasible and lethal. Of course it will be difficult to hit a target dead center but as said before, the point was to keep the enemy away from the minimum field artillery range and the artillery unit themselves.
The 800 meter 'french helmet' story can be found in the official LP08 manual issued by the German army: Translation from the manual (1917): Performance of the Lange Pistole 08. Due to the high rate of fire and the ease with which it can be handled, the pistol, in combined firing, and with enough ammunition available can be used effectively even against head sized targets up to 600 meters. Between 600 and 800 meters, with the correctly set sights, results can still be expected. Up to 200 meters, every target can be hit with result in single fire. At 800 meters a horse skull and a french steel helmet will be shot through. |
06-25-2009, 06:20 PM | #24 |
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biffJ.
Interesting! I never thought about a bullet that's about as long as it is wide. So if it starts a subsonic tumble, the trajectory isn't going to change that much! Almost like a musket ball. FN |
06-25-2009, 07:15 PM | #25 | |
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Reminds me of the story of Jesse James, when he rode with Quantrill's raiders, lining Union soldiers up against a tree to see how many could be penetrated with one rifle shot... |
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06-25-2009, 08:17 PM | #26 |
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two separate shots
(not a lot of horses wore french helmets, back then anyway, lol) |
06-25-2009, 09:43 PM | #27 |
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The 9mm bullets don't tumble at that range, they are still going straight even though they drop below the speed of sound at less than 100yds. If simply dropping below the speed of sound caused tumbling than the effective range of the 9mm parabellum would be 80-90 yds. The difference in the effect of passing the sound barrier between these short bullets and the longer rifle bullets is the center of gravity's location in relation to the aerodynamic stability of the bullet. With the short pistol bullets the CG is pretty close to the aerodynamic center and therefore the bullet does not lose much in the way of stability as the shockwave moves forward due to the slowing of the bullet. In the long rifle bullets the CG is frequently quite a way back on the bullet and the CG always wants to be in front. The only thing keeping these bullets going straight is the spin and aerodynamics. As the bullet slows down the shock wave moves forward and that destabilizes the bullet as it moves in front of the CG. This doesn't always lead to tumbling but can cause wobble or nutation as its called. That is what disrupts the accuracy, not tumbling. Sorry for hijacking the thread with ballistics but it is pertinent.....
Frank |
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