Originally posted by hitech
E25280: Intial deacceration on the 50cal would be in the 1400 FPSPS Range
HiTech
My WAG was Way off And Generally useless.
Recalc (assuming the rest of my math isn't whacked):
Bomber and Fighter traveling 300mph, single bullet at 3000 feet range:
Bomber bullet impact: 2,231 feet/sec at 1.16 seconds
Fighter bullet impact: 1,586 feet/sec at 1.37 seconds
Difference: +40.7%
Range 1500 feet:
Bomber bullet impact: 2,592 feet/sec at 0.54 seconds
Fighter bullet impact: 2,232 feet/sec at 0.58 seconds
Difference: +16.1%
Notice the fighter bullet needs to start at 1500 feet to have the same power as the bomber bullet at 3000 feet?
Range 600 feet:
Bomber bullet impact: 2,859 feet/sec at 0.20 seconds
Fighter bullet impact: 2,702 feet/sec at 0.21 seconds
Difference: +5.8%
Now, assume Bomber is at 240mph and Fighter is at 300mph, single bullet at 3000 feet range:
Bomber bullet impact: 2,287 feet/sec at 1.13 seconds
Fighter bullet impact: 1,719 feet/sec at 1.30 seconds
Difference: +33.1%
Range 1500 feet:
Bomber bullet impact: 2,666 feet/sec at 0.52 seconds
Fighter bullet impact: 2,353 feet/sec at 0.55 seconds
Difference: +13.3%
Range 600 feet:
Bomber bullet impact: 2,935 feet/sec at 0.20 seconds (but 8 feet through fighter)
Fighter bullet impact: 2,805 feet/sec at 0.20 seconds (but 5 feet through bomber)
Difference: +4.6%
Spatula's HO question:
Single bullet HO at 3000 feet would impact both planes at 2,798 feet/sec at 0.91 seconds, 76.4% more power than the fighter bullet fired 3000 feet from behind and 25.4% more power than the bomber's return fire.
All "impact velocities" account for target movement. That is, in the first case the bomber's bullet impact speed is actual ground speed of 1,791 feet per second plus fighter's speed of 440 feet per second (2,231 total), while the fighter's bullet impact speed is 2,036 feet per second ground speed minus the bombers speed of 440 feet per second (1,586 total).
By the way, the same wikepedia sight that gave me the muzzle velocity of 3,050 feet per second gave an "effective range" of 2000 meters, or 6,600 feet. By my math and Hitech's initial deceleration, a bullet from a stationary platform would hit that target 6,600 feet away in 3.7 seconds with a velocity of about 1,128 feet per second, and still be "effective" (by whatever definition they use).
Restating the obvious,
I WAS TOTALLY WRONG and bow to the superiority of HiTech.
(Next, someone will point out I forgot to carry the two, and I'll have to calculate all over again . . . )
Once more, THANK YOU HiTech for teaching me.