mfb
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Win_94 said:Ice would skew the test. No one would doubt that ice causes a deviation.
OmCheeto said:Ok. How about Jello drops?
I contacted them about the Understanding Momentum Conservation in Isolated Systems/Gun Recoil vs POI issue I was interested in. It must have not been sexy enough, because they never got back to me.This would be an awesome Mythbuster's episode. Especially with the high speed camera.
mfb said:See attachment. Paint, yeah :D.
Win_94 said:I don't know if you're messing with me or what. I have no idea what that means.
Yes I get the "paint" reference; I just didn't understand the drawing.OmCheeto said:He's not messing with you. His laugh was at himself.
"Paint" is the poor mans doodle tool for PC's.
Many turn their noses up at it.
I use the mac version.
Ok, I understand what he means now... but trying to hit a single drop is what I need to try for. Because even in a heavy rain, the odds of hitting a single drop is great.OmCheeto said:His doodle is a graphical representation of the target area experiment I described.
The more water the bullet comes in contact, uni-laterally, the larger the deflection.
They are all part of the broader distribution. That is the reason why this is a broad distribution - the details of the impact vary.MikeyW said:mfb- I don't see how the distribution approach will work, hitting the water is not binary, some bullets may glance a droplet and be slightly deflected, and those glancing bullets will form a distribution with an intermediate half-width.
DaleSpam said:This would be an awesome Mythbuster's episode. Especially with the high speed camera.
mfb said:They are all part of the broader distribution. That is the reason why this is a broad distribution - the details of the impact vary.
It is likely bullet lead (an alloy containing trace elements of antimony and other metals). The high speed impact creates an enormous pressure within both bodies. Since this pressure deforms the metal bodies, they heat up (think of the pressure multiplied by the volume change as energy added to the body). When they heat up enough, the metal melts and, because of the pressure, explodes into tiny fragments.A.T. said:In the below video at 2:00 the bullet collides with some white balls, which disintegrate like a fluid, but seem solid before impact. They move faster than the bullet. What could that be? Lead?
mfb said:Thanks for the test. The result looks very nice.
MikeyW said:I'm convinced! I wonder why most of the hit bullets end up higher on the target. Must be a random fluke, hitting water droplets on the top half more than the bottom? I'd expect the hits would end up lower if they lose speed during the collision.