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those people are idiots. They are the types that tell you how well their 16" .308s shoot at long range but you'll never see them at a match or beyond the 25 yard range.
Hey guys, I've ordered a 28" barrel (1:10 twist) for target shooting and people tell me it wont be that accurate. Is that true?
What's a magic number?
I tend to prefer shorter barrels myself but you can't dispute the velocity gains from the longer tubes.
I know for 300wm, the magic number is 24 1/4 -- For 308, isn't it in the low 20's?
My 308 TRG 22 with a 26"barrel and my 308 AIAW with a 24" barrel both consistently shoot groups under 0.3 moa with my best 5 shot 100 yard groups under 0.2 moa.
Masked,
You are referencing theory in your argument. I'm referencing real-life application.
You keep referring to powder burn and some magical optimal barrel length. That argument is bullshit.
Your optimum barrel length will change with bullet weight, powder type, powder charge, outside air temperature, elevation etc. See? It's nice on paper but it doesn't work in real life.
The "optimal" barrel is the one that is suitable for the application. As long as that application is not kicking in doors or hunting/shooting in close, tight quarters, a short barrel ain't it.
Not trying to be a douche but my back ground is chemical engineering. I'm very familiar with physics, physical chemistry, and combustion reactions.
You are arguing Theory, not real life. In theory, things work out the way you and other have outlined...you can even run a program such as Quickload to tell you then powder burn is supposedly complete...however, all these results are based on calculations which are in turn based on a bunch of ASSumptions for variables out of your control...
I don't want to further derail this thread, but you mentioned Brian Litz,
Well, have you ever seen Bryan shoot? Know what his Long range rig is? Yeah, it ain't a short barrel anything...he runs what everyone else runs: a long barreled rig to extract the maximum potential from the load and then some.
Fact is optimal barrel length is a function of things that are out of your control...powder type (and its associated chemistry which changes from lot-to lot), powder charge, weather, elevation etc. All these things factor in and are difficult to ESTIMATE especially in the calculations your arguments rest on...we make up for it in real life by having a barrel longer than you think you might need, not shorter.
Same thing in my job as an Engineer...you calculate how much say surface area you need and you ADD some extra to account for unknown variables...
In long range shooting the extra barrel length is your fudge factor for the known & unknown unknowns...Capiche?
Barrel length is really all about powder burn...
All right Masked. You win. I loose. Ya happy?
OP, sorry to have crapped all over your thread. Your 28" barrel will be just fine. Let us know how she shoots after you've developed a load.
It really isn't ... fastest rifles in the world don't use powder or burn anything at all in the barrel (aka Light gas guns)
Muzzle velocity is direct product of pressure curve VS friction VS time.
In a cartridge firearm:
pressure curve = how intense and how long is the burn
friction = bullet weight, surface, twist rate
time = barrel length
With modern propellants even small cases like 6BR have enough residual pressure (well past the "burn) to overcome the friction and increase the velocity with longer barrel, even past 30".
In competition every bit of speed helps with wind uncertainty (winning vs loosing).
Long barrels come a the cost of size, weight AND stiffness.
There is no "right" answer for all situations; there is a double standard though - both F-class and tactical shooters have precision rifles, but they are for different situations and will not be competitive vice versa. While F-class shooters will easily admit that a 18 pound rifle will not do well shooting off a fence post in a time crunch; tactical shooters can't get it through their thick skulls that 18 inch rifle is not good for chasing 1/2MOA X-ring in the wind.... /rant off
I was just calling you a douche because you coined it, first. -- No ill will here, brother. Also, knowledge is power, no harm, no foul.
I was never saying a longer barrel is bad...My purpose was to explain that the OP doesn't need 28" to get a full powder burn...That's more/less likely achieved at around 24-26".
If I were the OP, again I did this with my 300wm, do the math, break down optimum barrel length and depending on your belief (Long vs. short) cut it or don't...I cut both of mine...Clearly it depends on the rifle's intent and him.
Stiffness, harmonics...There are 100s of factors in accuracy so, who knows...Your confidence per shot is going to equate to more than the barrel length = accuracy, theory, anyway!
Oye...But, within time there's also a diminishing return.
Again, I never argued against barrel length -- I argued that there was/is a provable diminishing return for us "common folk"...I do not define "common folk" as F-class or bench-rest shooters.
You have been...consistently...and you've hinged your argument to powder burn...which will vary with all the factors i mentioned.
I now understand your point of view (no experience shooting a bullseye type match at any distance of significance) but wish you weren't so strident in arguing something you have no experience with.
To masked,
In the truth about gun article you quoted, it is proven the longer barrel, higher bullet velocity. That will give you longer super sonic flight distance. In the usf paper you quote. The barrel was cut in field and recrowned with hand tool. I am not sure if that is a very good control condition. In addition, in the USC paper, it also show the velocity and barrel lenth relationship. Also, at the end, the accuracy vs barrel length result, it is showing, grouping for length >24" is better than barrel with <20" with my eye est. Sorry, I will agree with the other s base on your posted links.
Masked,
Here's what i now know about you
1. You don't know what a theory is.
2. You don't know how a theory is applied in real life or accounted for.
3. You've never shot competitively... at long range...or at any distance of note
4. You make no attempt get educated before hitting the "reply button"
Good day Sir!
If you want to quantify that relationship as burn time, okay but, the fact is that the longer the barrel, more powder is burned, thus more pressure = more velocity.
I also said that, eventually, that velocity reaches a point of diminishing returns.
.D.ID,
I have no doubt your short barrel shoots nice groups at 100yards, and that you have no trouble hitting large targets at extended distances.
However, the fact of the matter is that your short barrel is not and never will be a match winning barrel no matter who makes it.
I invite you to go to a local precision match in your area. You know, not a "tactical" match, but a match where the goal is to hit a 1/2MOA bullseye for several (usually 3 consecutive) 20-shot strings and report back on how well your short barrel did. You may want to bring a hack-saw with you tho as i'm sure those people running 30-32" barrels are gonna want to cut down their barrels down to the length you are running.
I'm not condeming short barrels, they have their place...close quarters applications, hunting in thick brush where shots rarely exceed 100-200yards etc. However, i'm pretty sure the OP got this long barrel for match and precision applications. And for that, the folks telling him his barrel wont be accurate because it's long are idiots and don't know a thing about accuracy or long range shooting.
I never actually said anything in regards to accuracy beyond the fact that it's entirely theoretical.
I simply said that there's a statistical proven relationship versus barrel length and velocity. If you want to quantify that relationship as burn time, okay but, the fact is that the longer the barrel, more powder is burned, thus more pressure = more velocity.
I also said that, eventually, that velocity reaches a point of diminishing returns.
Again, I never spoke about accuracy beyond the fact of theory. Also, what's interesting is the TTAG study disproves the USC paper in regards to accuracy...Because as others have said, there's far too much involved for us to actually test accuracy. Velocity -- That's easy.
My theory is that your head is stuck so far up your asshole you can't see straight. Guess I was right.
^^^^^^^What he said^^^^^^^+1I have 308s of different lengths. Anywhere from a 16" being built right now at GAP, to 2- 20"ers, and a 26". All have their place and limitations.
OP, your BBL if done right will be extremely accurate. Most all the F-Class guys are running 28+". IF you see yourself shooting inside 600 yds a lot and maybe you will be moving around then the shorter bbls seem to be a little better.
If your using a suppressor and you know the limitations of what you want to use your rifle for the my 16" looks pretty promising.
HUH? Since it will be weighted down with Suppressor, PVS 22/thermal, IR Illumination, sling, bipod, and maybe another mag or two and I might use the cover of darkness to get into a closer shot then I say they all have their place.
A rifle is a tool and you must select the best tool for the job, are there some that will be more versatile? Sure, but you still need to choose accordingly.
OP, by target shooting do you mean like F-TR?
And you will also see that people in diferent locations will set their guns up much differently than other parts of the country.
If I could only have one I would go somewhere around 22-24" I think but that's because I wont be competing. If so I'll run what I brung and shoot against myself.
And BTW, my 26" and my 20" are both very accurate rifles. My 16" on the way probably will be too. Since I plan on using it on yotes and such and a truck gun out to 500ish I think it will be nice. I have other options for other needs.
OP, glad to hear you got you something to shoot. Don't let anyone hold you back. Don't be scared, get you a good load and get to practicing. You will find yourself light years ahead of everyone left behind nitpicking. Make it work.
Best of luck to you sir.
I have 308s of different lengths. Anywhere from a 16" being built right now at GAP, to 2- 20"ers, and a 26". All have their place and limitations.
OP, your BBL if done right will be extremely accurate. Most all the F-Class guys are running 28+". IF you see yourself shooting inside 600 yds a lot and maybe you will be moving around then the shorter bbls seem to be a little better.
If your using a suppressor and you know the limitations of what you want to use your rifle for the my 16" looks pretty promising.
HUH? Since it will be weighted down with Suppressor, PVS 22/thermal, IR Illumination, sling, bipod, and maybe another mag or two and I might use the cover of darkness to get into a closer shot then I say they all have their place.
A rifle is a tool and you must select the best tool for the job, are there some that will be more versatile? Sure, but you still need to choose accordingly.
OP, by target shooting do you mean like F-TR?
And you will also see that people in diferent locations will set their guns up much differently than other parts of the country.
If I could only have one I would go somewhere around 22-24" I think but that's because I wont be competing. If so I'll run what I brung and shoot against myself.
And BTW, my 26" and my 20" are both very accurate rifles. My 16" on the way probably will be too. Since I plan on using it on yotes and such and a truck gun out to 500ish I think it will be nice. I have other options for other needs.
OP, glad to hear you got you something to shoot. Don't let anyone hold you back. Don't be scared, get you a good load and get to practicing. You will find yourself light years ahead of everyone left behind nitpicking. Make it work.
Best of luck to you sir.
It is definitely NOT true.Hey guys, I've ordered a 28" barrel (1:10 twist) for target shooting and people tell me it wont be that accurate. Is that true?