Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:34 am
It's not a hard effect to achieve - suffice to say, there are no rifling marks visible on the projectile...Spooky wrote:How did they do that?
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It's not a hard effect to achieve - suffice to say, there are no rifling marks visible on the projectile...Spooky wrote:How did they do that?
Note also that some of the bullets in ballistic gelatin are hollow points with a pre-scored jacket that open up in a predictable and doubtless devastating manner.Ragnarok wrote:I think one of the more interesting things is how you can see things like the bullet jackets pulling apart down the rifling marks.
Shoot it out a smoothbore barrel?At around the 5:06 mark it looks like a tumbling bullet impacting sideways. How did they do that?
Or through another medium before impacting the gellatin, when a bullet enters a dense medium the nose slows down while the tail wants to keep on moving, causing the bullet to tumble. With some high velocity bullets the rotational force is so strong that it actually tears the bullet apart, providing a devastating fragmentation effect.qwerty wrote:Shoot it out a smoothbore barrel?

Perhaps someone didn't take the time to read my post on the matter...qwerty wrote:Shoot it out a smoothbore barrel?
I tryed to get the picture to load but keep getting 404 error.jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:Or through another medium before impacting the gellatin, when a bullet enters a dense medium the nose slows down while the tail wants to keep on moving, causing the bullet to tumble. With some high velocity bullets the rotational force is so strong that it actually tears the bullet apart, providing a devastating fragmentation effect.qwerty wrote:Shoot it out a smoothbore barrel?
Yup. Path of least resistance. Most energy-friendly way to rip apart.Ragnarok wrote:I think one of the more interesting things is how you can see things like the bullet jackets pulling apart down the rifling marks.
Yeah, that was actually pretty cool, the way the BG was spinning off in a spiral pattern because of the rotation.psycix wrote:Did you notice that in some ballistic gelatin shots the cavity has a spiral marking caused by the bullet's rotation?