May 11th, 2010, 21:22 | #61 | |
Official ASC Bladesmith
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Here's something to wrap your heads around, hop up on heavier BBs (0.25g and above) not only generates lift, but also reduces drag. Open up your minds and debate that nugget. Lol |
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May 11th, 2010, 21:32 | #62 | |
formerly Sepulcrum
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Also, this thread made me LOL so full of win and fail comments. I love horrendous misinformation. My mind, that just blew it. Last edited by AngelusNex; May 11th, 2010 at 21:35.. |
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May 11th, 2010, 21:37 | #63 |
It is because of density and shape moreso than mass. Think parachute vs 200lb chunk of rock. The chute decreases the density of the person relative to the air. The same reason why people float in water, and why you'll get sucked under in an avalanche.
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May 11th, 2010, 21:45 | #64 |
I don't think the OP was asking for a physics lesson.
There are thousands of factors that will go into play that cannot be controlled. He's asking for quantifiable controllable changes that he can make to his gun to improve accuracy and range.For example; He cannot change the gravitational constant of the universe but it will effect the range of his shots so there's no point in discussing it here. As was said before, there are many simple things you can do. The simplest is use a heavier bb. As it will not be effected as greatly as a lighter one. Also buy the best quality you can find. I have used BB bastards and I found them excellent. Moving from there, increasing the power of the spring your using is usually the next step. And so on and so forth. Cheers. |
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May 11th, 2010, 22:22 | #65 |
Still cant see any links between this and :
2 objects of same shape but different masses should have the same acceleration whether you drop them from 20 feet or 200 feet high. No? |
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May 11th, 2010, 23:06 | #66 |
Official ASC Bladesmith
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Air resistance comes into play there. A lighter object (for fun say a 0.20g BB) will be more likely affected by air resistance than a heavier object (say a 0.36g), so the heavier will hit the ground sooner than the lighter.
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May 12th, 2010, 18:04 | #67 | |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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The big problem with doing drop tests from a 200ft building is that most objects actually reach their terminal velocity ABOVE 200ft. We saw the trailer for whatever movie where a guy is strato diving and it turns out theres a dragon trying to catch up to him. I put forth that at their altitude, the dragon would have no problem catching up to him. Yet he argued that because the dragon was larger, it would fall significantly slower. And I argued that because the dragon weighs several hundred pounds more, and it's frame is built for being aerodynamic, the dragon would indeed fall faster. He religiously argued that mass had nothing to do with terminal velocity. And stated that a 2L bottle of water and a 2L bottle of lead would hit the ground at the same time dropped from any height. Well form 200ft they'll hit the ground at the same time, but the difference in velocity for both objects wouldn't differ for about 2000ft of freefall Anyway to summarize, he's a dumbass and I won the arguement. Seems to be common in his family though as his uncle swore water was the most conductive thing in the world lol |
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May 12th, 2010, 18:21 | #68 | |
look, thundercactus, you need to chilax, take a step back, and think about what you are saying.
By applying your theory of compression and laminar airflow, you are saying that a pitching machine spitting a Baseball @140km/h will fly the ball farther than a baseball PITCHER throwing the same ball @ 140km/h. That's just absolutely mindfuckingly absurd. Cmon brother, it's common sense. Assuming that they are both 140km/h, and projected at the same angle, under the same conditions, they WILL fly the same distance. And the sole reason you would state that theory is because the pitching machine has barrel guidance and laminar airflow projecting it. Quote:
What's more? That 50FPS gun will fly as far as 1000feet! Obviously duh! Laws of Compression! Last edited by Skladfin; May 12th, 2010 at 18:36.. |
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May 14th, 2010, 19:40 | #69 |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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Apply the right hopup and I guarantee the pitching machine will throw it further than the pitcher!
Obviously not every low fps gun outranges every high fps gun, those are just my examples that you don't need high fps to get long range. Using .36g BBs with a 470fps sniper rifle, with good compression, blows everything away. And a 50fps pistol won't outrange anything because there's an ideal speed for BB's to get maximum range, and that speed is 330-350fps In high fps rifles you use heavier ammo. Why? Because it's more accurate, yes, buy say you have a 400fps VSR-10. It's about the most reliable platform you can do testing on. It's shooting .20g BB's at 400fps, they go all over place, but if you manage to get one to go straight you notice is has crap for range anyway because it always destabilizes vertically no matter what you set your hopup to. If your using .25s, much better but still doesn't get a great flightpath. .30s, okay now we're talking, they're heavier so it's harder for them to destabilize, not to mention they don't have air bubbles in them which greatly improves accuracy more than anything else. But they're also flying slow enough that they maintain their path very easily. As you go up in weight all of a sudden you start losing range and there's nothing you can do to improve on it except go to a higher FPS. Think of it like a glider, a glider has an optimal gliding speed, and it's NEVER it's maximum speed. And as far as sporting good are concerned, this happens with baseballs as well, your hopup has a greater effect on your projectile at certain velocities. If your going to fast, your hopup may not have any effect at all, too slow and you'll just be shooting upwards. I used to serve volleyballs by 'cutting' the bottom of the ball horizontally, giving it the same hopup effect as a BB. It would go damn straight every time. Once I put so much spin on it it barely got any range at all, it was going to fall 3 feet short of the net. At about 5 feet in the air it got to such a low velocity that the hopup effect hit it's optimal point and it literally picked itself back up and hopped over the net. By straight simple physics, your absolutely correct. But your failing to take into account that hopup drastically changes the simple physics of the BB. And if you don't have good compression, your BB doesn't stay centered in your barrel And it ricochets down before it leaves, therefore giving you crap range, crap accuracy and crap consistency. |
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