Just playing around with the 6 Degree Of Freedom simulation and learning how to make video's from the output.
click here to view video
The link is to a dynamic plot of the pitching and yawing motion of a bullet fired with an initial yaw rate of 25 radians per second (about 1,433 degrees per second). You can watch the bullet damp the yaw cycles from a maximum of over 3 degrees to less than 1 degree at 200 yards. This is the process commonly referred to as the bullet 'going to sleep'.
As for how realistic/common a 25 rad/s initial yaw rate is, I can't say. The motion produced by such a 'tip-off' rate only acts to reduce the effective BC by less than 1% in the first 100 yards, and not at all beyond that. A shot with 25 rad/s initial yaw rate only strikes about 0.75" from a bullet launched with no yaw at 100 yards. If the initial yaw were randomly oriented, this would produce a radius of dispersion of 0.75", and a 1.5" c-t-c group. However, if the initial yaw rate is always in the same direction, then the shots could form a group much smaller than 1.5".
I suspect that thinner, lighter weight 'whippier' barrels would tend to produce higher levels of initial pitch/yaw than a heavy bull barrel like we use in competition.
-Bryan
click here to view video
The link is to a dynamic plot of the pitching and yawing motion of a bullet fired with an initial yaw rate of 25 radians per second (about 1,433 degrees per second). You can watch the bullet damp the yaw cycles from a maximum of over 3 degrees to less than 1 degree at 200 yards. This is the process commonly referred to as the bullet 'going to sleep'.
As for how realistic/common a 25 rad/s initial yaw rate is, I can't say. The motion produced by such a 'tip-off' rate only acts to reduce the effective BC by less than 1% in the first 100 yards, and not at all beyond that. A shot with 25 rad/s initial yaw rate only strikes about 0.75" from a bullet launched with no yaw at 100 yards. If the initial yaw were randomly oriented, this would produce a radius of dispersion of 0.75", and a 1.5" c-t-c group. However, if the initial yaw rate is always in the same direction, then the shots could form a group much smaller than 1.5".
I suspect that thinner, lighter weight 'whippier' barrels would tend to produce higher levels of initial pitch/yaw than a heavy bull barrel like we use in competition.
-Bryan