#TheyDidTheMath
What makes a AP "kick"?
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Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
I spend a lot of time and pellets searching for the answer to this.
The worst of my "kicks" seem to be related to my trigger pull (I am shooting an AV 46M). I get a lot of upward kicks, but then I get a lot of nice 10s from the same gun.
Keep practicing!
The worst of my "kicks" seem to be related to my trigger pull (I am shooting an AV 46M). I get a lot of upward kicks, but then I get a lot of nice 10s from the same gun.
Keep practicing!
Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
Recoil is a reaction motion caused by the acceleration of the pellet. Its also meaningless.
Recoil is meaningless because it is a constant. The same pellet weight will give the same recoil
in a range dictated by the standard deviation of the gun velocity. So that means that as long as you do things
the same, recoil motion cancels itself out and is a non factor. Where recoil matters is when the shooter adds variables to the shot
process. This usually shows up in grip differences. If you change how you grasp the gun shot to shot, the POI will move.
its really that simple......
Recoil is meaningless because it is a constant. The same pellet weight will give the same recoil
in a range dictated by the standard deviation of the gun velocity. So that means that as long as you do things
the same, recoil motion cancels itself out and is a non factor. Where recoil matters is when the shooter adds variables to the shot
process. This usually shows up in grip differences. If you change how you grasp the gun shot to shot, the POI will move.
its really that simple......
Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
STOP IT! You're taking away the toys from all the Isaac Newton wannabes.spektr wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 9:06 am Recoil is a reaction motion caused by the acceleration of the pellet. Its also meaningless.
Recoil is meaningless because it is a constant. The same pellet weight will give the same recoil
in a range dictated by the standard deviation of the gun velocity. So that means that as long as you do things
the same, recoil motion cancels itself out and is a non factor. Where recoil matters is when the shooter adds variables to the shot
process. This usually shows up in grip differences. If you change how you grasp the gun shot to shot, the POI will move.
its really that simple......
Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
The "kick" you describe is you, not the pistol. It's caused by a reflexive tightening of the grip in anticipation of the shot. Hang the pistol out pointed at the target like you were dry firing. Then tighten your grip a little, and see which way the sights move.
If you want to eliminate these shots, you need to work on getting "surprise shots". As soon as you consciously think about "firing the pistol", you are in trouble. Especially if your brain is telling your finger to fire "now!" Concentrate on moving the trigger to the rear, or constantly increasing pressure on the trigger. The pistol WILL fire, but because it is not the result of an abrupt willful conscious action on your part, it's harder to anticipate.
Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
> The Idea being that the rod should point slightly downwards in "anticipation" of the kick?
The rod will point up, not down. The trajectory is a parabola
The rod will point up, not down. The trajectory is a parabola
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Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
> Only in a vacuum.
Good point :-)
> Also, it's technically an ellipse
No, it's not - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projectile_motion
Good point :-)
> Also, it's technically an ellipse
No, it's not - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projectile_motion
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Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
It's an ellipse because if the earth itself wasn't in the way and it was just a point mass, the pellet would orbit around the point mass. An ellipse closely resembles a parabola at points close to the vertex.
Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
Ellipse in a vacuum. Even if it only went a few hundred yards on the moon. Which isn't a perfect vacuum, but close enough.
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Re: What makes a AP "kick"?
I am convinced, thanks