That is the way I always figured it.The liner should have a coned rear face to go in the barrel. This way only a thin layer of steel - with a 1/16th" hole - stands between the bore charge and the prime.
I'm still in the investigation faze of this theory and as I make my own vents of A-2 stainless tool steel I will have the opportunity to see first hand how well some of these ideas work.Im just wondering here.
Isnt a tapered touch hole liner sort of the converging section on a rocket nozzle? Does it increase the amount of energy stole from the muzzle as opposed having a flat surface?
After you get done with your investigation please let us know what you found.I'm still in the investigation faze of this theory and as I make my own vents of A-2 stainless tool steel I will have the opportunity to see first hand how well some of these ideas work.
I have enough experience with White lighting liners ( shooting next to them and seeing how they vector internal breech pressure far out the side) to not care for them.
I much prefer to cone the outside to vector pan flash inward and discourage breech pressure flow outward.
I also believe that a funnel effect is more representative of pressure flow physics in a flint lock than is the Venturi action often used to describe it, which is what occurs from percussion nipple interior profile.
A funnel in a hose or drain will facilitate much more volume of flow than will a flat surface into the pipe which is what we want on the inside of a vent to hold back more of the breech pressure. On the pan side of the vent we want a funnel shape to encourage pan flash flow inward to the main charge as well as decreasing the length of it's passage it has to move.
You have rapidly expanding gasses at a higher pressure than the outside air. Physical properties don't allow gas to fly from a low pressure to a high oressure.way back in the early 70s, in the Dixie gun works catalog, they did a test, and showed that a flint gun produced greater velocity than a percussion gun. They said that as the projectile moved forward it sucked more oxygen in through the vent and caused a better burn of the powder.
The NMLRA magazine, Muzzle Blasts, did testing on this in the last issue and disproved the "fuse effect" idea, and the idea that sloshing the powder in the pan away from the touch hole results in faster ignition.I wonder how many pages this thread will go.
Personally I think there are more reasons to have a liner than not to, yes there may be a very slight velocity loss however, depending on how thick the barrel wall is you essentially have a fuse which will increase the ignition time from pan flash to igniting the main charge. This will increase the possibility of moving off point of aim, especially shooting off hand.
It's hard enough to stay on target with a fast ignition let alone a rifle that has a slight hang fire.
My Kibler SMR came with a White Lightning vent liner already installed. They are reputed to be fast, and outlast other liners.Yeah, well I will keep using White lightning vent liners. They work for me and have worked very well.
I went back and read the article, it was about the position of the priming in the pan. I would like to see someone do an experiment with a 32 caliber in a 1" barrel so there would be a nice long section of barrel between the pan and the main charge, then drill it out and put in a liner, that would be the test.
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