Recoil (ie velocity, momentum and energy) is easily calculated; speed and weight of bullet and powder gases in relation to weight of gun. The only difference in your example, if the load and the guns both weigh the same, is the speed of the bullet.
Shorter barrel => Lower speed => Less recoil
But the other part is how well the design of the rifle fits you and helps you to manage the recoil. Maybe you could calculate a higher "torque effect" for the shorter barrel but this should be a *very* small difference.
[This message has been edited by Wachtel (edited 03-29-2002).]
Ultimately, it is up to the individual shooter. The dynamics equation still supports the longer barrel lower recoil torque though. If you don't believe me and do not understand the physics involved, consider this. If you have ever shot a powerful hand guns (or seen one shot) with a very short barrel you will have noticed how violently it flipped up in the shooters hands. The same handgun with a long barrel (say 8"+) and the flip is much less severe. This is the phenomena I am referring to.
Todd E
[This message has been edited by Todd E (edited 03-30-2002).]
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Ray Atkinson
Finally figured out that it was the blast that made it feel that way, not the ft-lbs.
On the big bores, made for iron sights, use adequate drop at the butt and comb, some cast off, and pitch the recoil pad so it is not perpendicular to the bore centerline. Very important is a large enough barrel contour such that the rifle balances and handles nicely. And make that butt wide enough and high enough so you have generous area for the recoil pad.
The 458 Lott in my site photos has suprisingly lessened felt recoil when shooting 500 grain full loads. The barrel is a 22 inch No. 6 contour, total rifle weight is 9-3/8 pounds, and it feels lighter due to the balance. Ask JJHack how it handles!
Build the rifle propely, and forget about brakes. If the rifle has to be braked, the stock design is all wrong, or you have more cartridge than you can handle, or a combination of both. Don't judge the recoil of a big bore DGR when shooting off a bench, this is the wrong way to use the rifle. I use the bench and a Past pad for regulating the sights, but after this event, is is standing up. After all, you will not shoot that Cape Buff when using a bench!!! Stand up and learn how to shoot.
I see many stocks on iron sighted big bores, both from the big manufacturers and custom gun builders, where one cannot see the iron sights, or you have to really push your cheek into the stock to get a sight picture. Pushing your cheek into the stock to get a sight picture transmits a good bit of the recoil into your cheek bone and downright hurts when the rifle is fired! Plus this can lead to a detached retina.
Ray is correct in his past statements about big bore stock design: Once you have fired a big bore with a correct stock, you will change your mind significantly.
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Currently in Exile on the Beautiful Olympic Peninsula of Washington State.
Email Address is rifles@earthlink.net
Web site http://home.earthlink.net/~rifles/
Holland and Holland is the best example that I can think off..Low comb, thin razor cheekpiece, drop at heel and comb, and 5/8" cast off, perfect for iron sights and they flat work great with a scope...and suck up recoil like a sponge..the first time I shot one I knew Jack had been had.
Why? A stright stock will drive the gun stright back into the shoulder, end of story.. a little drop from the, and this is important, "bore line" at heel and comb will bring some back and some up splitting up the forces.
Lifting the head up 1/8 to 1/4 of and inch and rapeing the much heralded triangle ( a term rendered by some expert gun writer ) is not the end of all shooting skill, in fact it is meaningless...
Now go out and find an old Win. M-70 with a low comb and see if shooting it causes any great harm to your shooting skills when scoped..Your fathers and their fathers had no trouble with them when old Bill Weaver brought out his first scopes and all guns had low combs...I remember that much. So all this hype to impress folks and sell rifles, never ment much to me..
I probably just ruined several lives and some will live in anguish for weeks from this post but its time the woke up and accepted the fact they been "Skreeeruded"
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Ray Atkinson
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NRA Life member