I came across a video documenting that those pistols were shot while holding in a sideways grip:
I have one on order from Loyalist and it'll be fun to try shooting it that way.
Aha...The "gangsta" grip.
I came across a video documenting that those pistols were shot while holding in a sideways grip:
I have one on order from Loyalist and it'll be fun to try shooting it that way.
The breech is solidly fixed to the rest of the firearm, so when it moves, everything moves. Otherwise, you're violating Newton's laws of motion. That's why you need a tight grip on a pistol with and a firm wrist and elbow, and a firm shouldering of a long arm, so the force is exerted against your body weight, and not just the weapon.Not implying it, stating it.
Simple physics.
The explosion of the ignited powder pushes on the bullet and the breech in equalibrium, so there is no movement of the gun itself in either direction.
Once the bullet leaves the barrel it is no longer being pushed, but the push against the breech continues, causing the gun to move back, aka: recoil.
Works that way for all guns, not just muzzle loaders.
I came across a video documenting that those pistols were shot while holding in a sideways grip:
I have one on order from Loyalist and it'll be fun to try shooting it that way.
Well stated Mr. Newton!RmFnLA - It definitely is physics, but you don't have it right. Recoil starts the instant the ball and the gas column start to move and continues as long as they are accelerating and are inside the gun. The speed of the ball plus the expelled gas times their mass will equal the speed of the gun times its mass. The gun moves back (and probably up because of the way it's held) and continues to move because it now has that momentum, and the same thing for the ball or bullet.
The cause of recoil doesn't start when the bullet leaves the barrel, it stops then. The recoil continues because it had already started to move.
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Things in motion remain in motion until something stops them.
It's like trying to throw a baseball when you're on roller skates - the ball goes one way, you go the other way.
It's also why felt recoil is much less if you hold a gun tight against you, then you are adding your mass into the equation, making the speed part less.
I get it, and you are right, itās negligible for modern guns with lighter, faster bullets but apparently not for muzzle loaders.The breech is solidly fixed to the rest of the firearm, so when it moves, everything moves. Otherwise, you're violating Newton's laws of motion. That's why you need a tight grip on a pistol with and a firm wrist and elbow, and a firm shouldering of a long arm, so the force is exerted against your body weight, and not just the weapon.
Muzzle rise is caused by the recoil vector being the center of your hand or shoulder. That creates a moment, and that moment is what rotates the barrel up. Both of these begin when the bullet begins to move. With a pistol, the barrel is short enough that movement is negligible -- usually -- before the bullet clears the barrel.
Nice!This is the flintlock pistol we were shooting; .50 caliber smoothbore with an 8ā barrel at about 20 yards. Itās one I built from parts from MBS.
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