Well, I happened to have Greenhill's paper in hand when I read this thread..... :grin:
Seriously, from a theoretical POV, if the ball comes out in the shape of a sphere (I will address again down below), then there is no reason to give it gyroscopic stability to prevent tumbling....
Tumbling occurs with a conical because the center of gravity and the center of aerodynamic pressure do not coincide, hence air-drag to the nose exerts an overturning moment of rotation about a sideways axis (the overturning moment = product of the aerodynamic overturning force x distance between CG and CP, and btw for other readers, a "moment" in this context is another name for a torque or "turning torque"). However, with a sphere the CG and the CP coincide, so the product = zero and there is no overturning moment.
So, with a spherical bullet (again, I will change this in a few moments down below) the only reason I can think of to spin it is to average imperfections (mass and shape defects) and/or to give it a known spin so that no random spin can cause unpredictable "knuckle ball" or "curve ball" effects (Magnus Effects).
However, spinning the ball introduces drift at extended range, so when you fix one problem(?) you introduce another.
I am not at all sure that the simplified Greenhill Formula should be applied to roundballs, even if experience has taught that it is ok. Remember what I said from Greenhill's paper, that Greenhill's ORIGINAL Formula if applied to a sphere says use NO TWIST AT ALL!!! Only the simplified approximation that everyone is familiar with gives less than infinity for the spherical bullet, and that occurs entirely by accident...it was NEVER part of Greenhill's reasoning. Furthermore, there is a lot of evidence that much less twist on a PRB would be better. As you mentioned, Lt. James Forsyth, in his 1864 book "The Sporting Rifle and its Projectiles," (another great name to drop :wink: ) suggests that twists from 104" to 144" are fine for .69 cal guns he was shooting out to between 150 and 250yards! The Greenhill number would be Twist = .69*125 = 86" which is way faster twist and would result in far more drift at ranges beyond 100yds. In stability terms this would be about 60% more stability factor, or 60% more gyroscopically stable than 144" twist. WAY MORE TWIST! And we also see 1in 48" twist shoot ok alongside 1in66" twists, where this represents a 50% difference in stability factor. But take those same two guns, one slow and one fast twist and in the same caliber and shoot PRBs at a 150-250 yard target and I think you will begin to see the diffference.
The only reason our faster twist barrels don't bother us more (for drift and perhaps for dynamic instability due to faster twist) is because hardly anyone ever shoots beyond 100yds with a PRB, and even then we have no expectation of hitting anything, having learned this from all our "modern oldtimers"....Forsyth had much higher expectations. And we have forebears who would snipe the British at any range less than 300yds with a reasonable expectation of a hit. Col. George Hanger, in his book (yes, I have a copy :rotf
describes a 400yd PRB shot taken at him and another British officer by a "colonial", the shot hitting and killing the horse standing behind them. Who among us could make that shot?
Now, to delve deeper, we all know that we do not really shoot round spheres....instead to some degree or another they are obdurated (either in loading or definitely in shooting) and I think what comes out looks more like a oblate spheroid with a short flat bearing circumference. In other words, the aspect ratio is LESS than one, the ball is become slightly flattened from front to rear, no longer true sphere....and now it needs some gyro spin again..... :grin:
But the question I have not answered yet is "how much?" and "based on what principles?"
Maybe not nearly as much as we may think using (mis-using?) Greenhill as a guide.
YHS,
rawdog
BTW, it is not true that no one has come up with a better twist formula....you just don't see it in the popular gun media because gun writers may have "taken" game, but they have never taken physics, and they would rather keep their pet theories alive, sans physics.