C h r i s
Well-Known Member
It's widely known that a faster twist can slightly slow down a bullet, compared to the same round of ammunition in an otherwise identical rifle with slower twist (so same barrel length, bore size, material). I'd always assumed this drop to be very small and read somewhere that for a 30cal its a loss of 1.25 fps per inch-unit of barrel twist (Quoting Bryan Litz).
So after picking up a new Tikka T3x .223 with an 8" twist 22.4" barrel I did a series of chrono tests, as I have some data from when I had the same rifle in a 12" twist.
The results were surprising, and so I'm thinking that there are other significant factors at play here, I was expecting a 5 ft/sec muzzle velocity reduction.
Average MV from 3 shots of each ammunition type as follows, these are all factory rounds, same boxes of ammunition for both rifles, same chrono (magneto V3), both rifles had 10 rounds from new (plus proof) and cleaned before the tests were conducted.
22.4", 12" twist, Tikka T3x, stainless, at 11 Deg C
Hornady 40gn vmax 'varmint express' : 3760 ft/sec, SD 36.2
Hornady 53gn vmax 'superformance': 3336 ft/sec, SD 13.6
GGG 69gn HPBT 2911 ft/sec, SD 11.2 (unstable)
22.4", 8" twist, Tikka T3x, stainless, at 15 Deg C
Hornady 40gn vmax 'varmint express' : 3628 ft/sec, SD 14.5
Hornady 53gn vmax 'superformance': 3373 ft/sec, SD 11.0
GGG 69gn HPBT 2905 ft/sec, SD 9.1
Notice how the 40gn bullets are travelling approx 130ft/sec faster from the slower twist rifle. Where as the 53gn and 69gn are not a million miles apart between rifles.
Obviously not a 'scientific' test, but interesting none the less. As the chrono is strapped to the end of rifle it cant be the air density difference due to temperature variation, but I suppose some of this could be down to temperature of the ammunition.
So after picking up a new Tikka T3x .223 with an 8" twist 22.4" barrel I did a series of chrono tests, as I have some data from when I had the same rifle in a 12" twist.
The results were surprising, and so I'm thinking that there are other significant factors at play here, I was expecting a 5 ft/sec muzzle velocity reduction.
Average MV from 3 shots of each ammunition type as follows, these are all factory rounds, same boxes of ammunition for both rifles, same chrono (magneto V3), both rifles had 10 rounds from new (plus proof) and cleaned before the tests were conducted.
22.4", 12" twist, Tikka T3x, stainless, at 11 Deg C
Hornady 40gn vmax 'varmint express' : 3760 ft/sec, SD 36.2
Hornady 53gn vmax 'superformance': 3336 ft/sec, SD 13.6
GGG 69gn HPBT 2911 ft/sec, SD 11.2 (unstable)
22.4", 8" twist, Tikka T3x, stainless, at 15 Deg C
Hornady 40gn vmax 'varmint express' : 3628 ft/sec, SD 14.5
Hornady 53gn vmax 'superformance': 3373 ft/sec, SD 11.0
GGG 69gn HPBT 2905 ft/sec, SD 9.1
Notice how the 40gn bullets are travelling approx 130ft/sec faster from the slower twist rifle. Where as the 53gn and 69gn are not a million miles apart between rifles.
Obviously not a 'scientific' test, but interesting none the less. As the chrono is strapped to the end of rifle it cant be the air density difference due to temperature variation, but I suppose some of this could be down to temperature of the ammunition.
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