Now for the real stupid question of the day. I realize this is probably like bringing a knife to a gun fight, but golf uses dimples to stabilize the flight of the ball. Any value in doing that in the area between 113 and 115 for stabilization?
Hello, FSG;
There are no stupid questions in aerodynamics. The dimpling of golf balls has to do with preventing "attached flow" in ultra-low-speed aerodynamics. I believe it minimizes hooking and slicing effects while increasing flight durations. It is sudden flow attachment which causes a curve ball to break suddenly and a knuckle ball to jump randomly at a certain airspeed. Low-speed aerodynamics of spherical projectiles is just weird. For that matter, look at the transonic behavior of a 9/16-inch diameter sphere.
As to your question about airflow over the boat-tail surfaces, it is already in turbulent boundary layer flow for my bullet design in any rifle caliber. I want that flow field to remain attached to the conical BT surface in order to direct that flow smoothly toward a compression point 3.2-calibers behind the base of the bullet. I believe that design might promote base pressure recovery by partially entrapping the shed wake vortices and pulling them along with the bullet. That is how an "effective boat-tail" design is supposed to work anyway. The rear corner of the BT is machined sharp for this flow-directing purpose. Any radius there greatly promotes alternate vortex shedding which increases drag and causes flight instability, especially at transonic airspeeds.
Jim Boatright