Re: The effect of free recoil on POI
My semi-educated opinion:
Bullets are small relative to the rifle mass, but it takes a lot of force to accelerate a bullet from rest to a muzzle velocity of roughly 3000 fps. This bullet acceleration force is exerted on the rifle/shooter combination before any of the rearward "rocket thrust" effect happens.
When the bullet exits the muzzle and thereby uncorks the high-pressure gasses within the barrel, muzzle blast and most of the recoil occur. This is of course dependant upon caliber, muzzle size, powder charge, muzzle brake, etc. The bullet is gone by this point, but I suppose if the muzzle is moving just at the time the bullet leaves the barrel, these gasses could disturb the bullet as it leaves, causing unpredictable wobbling?
The key I would think would be consistency of launch. One could clamp the rifle in a vice for consistency, or let it free recoil on a string each time. I would think as long as absolute consistency was maintained, so would point of impact.
I agree with Sterling Shooter, holding the rifle firmly seems a better way of building consistency than allowing the rifle to move around on one's shoulder because there are too many variables with that technique. Variables would be: buttstock position, tissue damping and "spring rate", clothing flexibility or "spring rate/fluffiness". Also at play would be coefficient of friction between various types of clothing, which would allow the butt to move laterally unpredictably depending on the clothing worn.
Nate
My semi-educated opinion:
Bullets are small relative to the rifle mass, but it takes a lot of force to accelerate a bullet from rest to a muzzle velocity of roughly 3000 fps. This bullet acceleration force is exerted on the rifle/shooter combination before any of the rearward "rocket thrust" effect happens.
When the bullet exits the muzzle and thereby uncorks the high-pressure gasses within the barrel, muzzle blast and most of the recoil occur. This is of course dependant upon caliber, muzzle size, powder charge, muzzle brake, etc. The bullet is gone by this point, but I suppose if the muzzle is moving just at the time the bullet leaves the barrel, these gasses could disturb the bullet as it leaves, causing unpredictable wobbling?
The key I would think would be consistency of launch. One could clamp the rifle in a vice for consistency, or let it free recoil on a string each time. I would think as long as absolute consistency was maintained, so would point of impact.
I agree with Sterling Shooter, holding the rifle firmly seems a better way of building consistency than allowing the rifle to move around on one's shoulder because there are too many variables with that technique. Variables would be: buttstock position, tissue damping and "spring rate", clothing flexibility or "spring rate/fluffiness". Also at play would be coefficient of friction between various types of clothing, which would allow the butt to move laterally unpredictably depending on the clothing worn.
Nate