221 Fireball - what twist rate?
#11
#12
Super Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: texas
Posts: 1,201
yeah I know the threads old, but for the newer guys,
maybe because Im an engineer
but have you ever considered using precision measuring tools on the bullets you want to use and available math?
links to calculators
https://bergerbullets.com/twist-rate-calculator/
https://thebarreloutlet.com/twist-calculator/
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/...el-twist-rate/
maybe because Im an engineer
but have you ever considered using precision measuring tools on the bullets you want to use and available math?
links to calculators
https://bergerbullets.com/twist-rate-calculator/
https://thebarreloutlet.com/twist-calculator/
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/...el-twist-rate/
#14
Here we see a post that is on topic, a good question, a follow up to the OP, asking for personal experience from somebody who has now owned a firearm for several years.
Exactly what forums like this were intended to do.
Here we see a post that's not on topic, not a good question or addition to the thread, not adding anything useful in the slightest.
I don't know how i can make it any more simpler for you (and others who do this)
Your posts don't disappear three days after posting them. They show up in google searches all the time. That's what brings allot of people to the site. They Google ".221 fireball twist rate" and they end up here.
The information that was useful and valid in 2017 is still valid and useful today.
Pick a new thing to be bothered by.
-Jake
Exactly what forums like this were intended to do.
Here we see a post that's not on topic, not a good question or addition to the thread, not adding anything useful in the slightest.
Your posts don't disappear three days after posting them. They show up in google searches all the time. That's what brings allot of people to the site. They Google ".221 fireball twist rate" and they end up here.
The information that was useful and valid in 2017 is still valid and useful today.
Pick a new thing to be bothered by.
-Jake
#15
Was the 1:9 twist strictly necessary? According to Berger's Twist Rate Stability Calculator, this load would be "marginally stable" with a 1:12 twist. However, with the higher velocities produced by a rifle length barrel, I don't think a 1:12 twist would be a handicap.
I honestly haven't tested many other loads since this one does exactly what I want it to do. That's going to change soon, though, as I've just taken possession of a 24" barrel, also with a 1:9 twist. While the standard 1:12 would likely shoot these same loads just fine, I wanted the option to try some 69 grain BTHP bullets with slower burning powders that will likely be more accurate than my "economy" loads. I'll make a thread once I get started testing it.