texasmac wrote on Nov 28
th, 2025 at 11:57pm:
A bullet's spin rate (revolutions/second) is the lowest at the muzzle and increases as the bullet travels down range. This is because the bullet's velocity decreases faster than does it's spin rate.
Quote:
I think you meant to say the stability increases as the bullet travels down range due to the velocity decreasing faster than the spin rate. The spin rate only slows (decays) as it leaves the muzzle. Since spin rate is determined by the twist rate & velocity, nothing will make it spin faster hence the rough approximate spin rate decay of around 2% per 100yds.
Wayne
It should read that, since velocity slows faster than spin, the bullet will spin
more per inch of travel down range than at the muzzle.
The tricky part is that in general, a bullet that leaves the muzzle at 2000 fps will be spinning faster (rpm) down range at 1500 fps, than a bullet that leaves the muzzle at 1500 fps in the same barrel.
It’s all interesting, but holes in target tell a better story. And it’s more fun than math.
Texasmac do you have a source for the test at Aberdeen?
I’ve found references to the test, but not the actual testing.