Toast in Six Seconds — The Brutal Truth of Short Barrel Life
This thought-provoking article is one of the 15 most popular Daily Bulletin features over the last 12 months. We are republishing this story today for readers who may have missed it the first time around…
Here’s a little known fact that may startle most readers, even experienced gunsmiths: your barrel wears out in a matter of seconds. The useful life of a typical match barrel, in terms of actual bullet-in-barrel time, is only a few seconds. How can that be, you ask? Well you need to look at the actual time that bullets spend traveling through the bore during the barrel’s useful life. (Hint: it’s not very long).
Bullet-Time-in-Barrel Calculations
If a bullet flies at 3000 fps, it will pass through a 24″ (two-foot) barrel in 1/1500th of a second. If you have a useful barrel life of 3000 rounds, that would translate to just two seconds of actual bullet-in-barrel operating time.
Ah, but it’s not that simple. Your bullet starts at zero velocity and then accelerates as it passes through the bore, so the projectile’s average velocity is not the same as the 3000 fps muzzle velocity. So how long does a centerfire bullet (with 3000 fps MV) typically stay in the bore? The answer is about .002 seconds. This number was calculated by Varmint Al, who is a really smart engineer dude who worked at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, a government think tank that develops neutron bombs, fusion reactors and other simple stuff.
On his Barrel Tuner page, Varmint Al figured out that the amount of time a bullet spends in a barrel during firing is under .002 seconds. Al writes: “The approximate time that it takes a 3300 fps muzzle velocity bullet to exit the barrel, assuming a constant acceleration, is 0.0011 seconds. Actual exit times would be longer since the bullet is not under constant acceleration.”
We’ll use the .002 number for our calculations here, knowing that the exact number depends on barrel length and muzzle velocity. But .002 is a good average that errs, if anything, on the side of more barrel operating life rather than less.
So, if a bullet spends .002 seconds in the barrel during each shot, and you get 3000 rounds of accurate barrel life, how much actual firing time does the barrel deliver before it loses accuracy? That’s simple math: 3000 x .002 seconds = 6 seconds.
Gone in Six Seconds. Want to Cry Now?
Six seconds. That’s how long your barrel actually functions (in terms of bullet-in-barrel shot time) before it “goes south”. Yes, we know some barrels last longer than 3000 rounds. On the other hand, plenty of .243 Win and 6.5-284 barrels lose accuracy in 1500 rounds or less. If your barrel loses accuracy at the 1500-round mark, then it only worked for three seconds! Of course, if you are shooting a “long-lived” .308 Win that goes 5000 rounds before losing accuracy, then you get a whopping TEN seconds of barrel life. Anyway you look at it, a rifle barrel has very little longevity, when you consider actual firing time.
People already lament the high cost of replacing barrels. Now that you know how short-lived barrels really are, you can complain even louder. Of course our analysis does give you even more of an excuse to buy a nice new Bartlein, Krieger, Shilen etc. barrel for that fine rifle of yours.
Similar Posts:
- Gone in Six Seconds — The Shocking Truth of Barrel Life
- Toast in Six Seconds — Brutal Truth of Barrel Life (and Death)
- Gone in SIX Seconds — The Brutal Truth of Short Barrel Life
- A Few Seconds at Best — The Short Operating Life of Barrels
- Barrel Life — Key Factors That Affect Barrel Wear Over Time
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Tags: Accuracy, Barrel, barrel life
Over 3000 shots at 45g a pop, that is roughly 18-19 pounds of powder for a short action. 6 seconds of burn for 18lbs that is a boatload of energy lol
Only interesting as a “Wow! I didn’t know that!” sort of thing. Because, of course, you never stopped to figure it out. Think of it as giving you a lot of pleasure for 3,000 or so shots, that certainly took magnitudes more than .002 seconds each, considering the total aspect of your sport. Loading, driving to range, expectations of a good day, actual shooting, eats and BS with buddies—-you know, the usual. Of course you realized this, even as you took the time to read those calculations, right? The article’s title is known as “click bait”, but I fell for it too! Good shooting. Slowwwwly squeeze the trigger to make each one last a little longer!
I have a question.
assuming it has a 1/12 twist how many times does it do a complete turn shooting at 100 yds?
That,s at your velocities