High speed camera - target pistols
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High speed camera - target pistols
Hey,
I came across something very interesting. Take a look here: http://karlslundesport.dk/default.asp?A ... u&Item=114
For those of you that doesn't understand danish, here's a short translation:
Karlslunde Sport did functional tests with seven different pistols and with four different brands of ammunition. The goals of the test were to show how the pistol is feeding, how many times the slide bounced on the barrel, recoil/mussle jump and how long it takes for the pistol to get ready after one shot etc. All this is filmed by a Weinberger high speed camera at 1000, 2000 and 5000 pictures per second. If you want a DVD with all the films - 50 danish crowns including postage.
Download the short movies and enjoy! :-) Please post your impressions and analysis of the films.
Cheers,
Axel
I came across something very interesting. Take a look here: http://karlslundesport.dk/default.asp?A ... u&Item=114
For those of you that doesn't understand danish, here's a short translation:
Karlslunde Sport did functional tests with seven different pistols and with four different brands of ammunition. The goals of the test were to show how the pistol is feeding, how many times the slide bounced on the barrel, recoil/mussle jump and how long it takes for the pistol to get ready after one shot etc. All this is filmed by a Weinberger high speed camera at 1000, 2000 and 5000 pictures per second. If you want a DVD with all the films - 50 danish crowns including postage.
Download the short movies and enjoy! :-) Please post your impressions and analysis of the films.
Cheers,
Axel
Pretty amazing stuff Axel - thanks for the link.
It seems like the bolts on the Pardini and the MG really do the most bouncing when a fresh round is chambered while the Walther SSP looks absolutely motionless after the bolt goes forward.
The trajectory of the spent casing coming out of the SSP is very cool to watch too.
F. Paul in Denver
It seems like the bolts on the Pardini and the MG really do the most bouncing when a fresh round is chambered while the Walther SSP looks absolutely motionless after the bolt goes forward.
The trajectory of the spent casing coming out of the SSP is very cool to watch too.
F. Paul in Denver
Amazing indeed. Looking at the Xesse-Federal film, you can see the bullet is gone before any great recoil movement. Then the gun moves some, then the slide hits back and the gun moves much more.
Thanks for the translation. I'm 4th generation Danish-American and a whole lot of German too. I couldn't read it.
Thanks for the translation. I'm 4th generation Danish-American and a whole lot of German too. I couldn't read it.
I noticed how the bolts bounced as well. I thought the Walther expert had the most bounce. The ssp does look like it just closes - once.F. Paul wrote:It seems like the bolts on the Pardini and the MG really do the most bouncing when a fresh round is chambered while the Walther SSP looks absolutely motionless after the bolt goes forward.
What I noticed was that the Matchguns and the Walther ssp were the only ones to have what I consider a pure ejection of the spent case across all specimens. If you watch the others eject, some of the the cases collide with something after the ejector, whether bolt or frame. At first look I really liked the Matchguns ejection, but I have to agree that the ssp seems to show a "soft and elegant" ejection, in slow motion, at least.F. Paul also wrote:The trajectory of the spent casing coming out of the SSP is very cool to watch too.
Thanks to Axel for a link to some great videos, and thanks to Karlslunde Sport for posting them on line for our enjoyment.
Take Care,
Ed Hall
http://www.airforceshooting.org/
http://www.starreloaders.com/edhall/
hurt hands
Great fun, thanks!
Makes one wonder how many cases the SSP will eject onto the top of your hand ;-)
Bob
Makes one wonder how many cases the SSP will eject onto the top of your hand ;-)
Bob
Boy I still like the MG-2, too bad I had one of the first---liked that gun. The SSP seemed to take forever for the spent case to get out of the way. It's amazing the unbelievable complexity of the MG-2---I was fascinated with the Rube Goldberg operation---tremendously complex piece of engineering, which was my comment when I took mine out of the box. If I were ever to look for another standard pistol---I wouldn't know what to look at---my two current favourites are just not reliable guns as of yet. The SSP hasn't been heard of since the original flurry of news and the MG-2 seems to be relegated to the "Black Hole of Calcutta" as well. Oh well, such is life.
- julioalperi
- Posts: 67
- Joined: Wed Feb 07, 2007 3:35 pm
- Location: Spain
DVD
I tried to buy that DVD but they didn´t bothered to answer my email.
recoil movies
Have these movies disappeared....?
High-speed movies gone....
No, I cannot find any no links to the movies at Karlslunde anymore....
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- Location: Ruislip, UK
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- Posts: 212
- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2004 4:03 pm
- Location: Okanagan Valley, British Columbia
Movies
The link given in the opening message of this thread still works for me, too. It does take several minutes from the time I click on the file I want until it actually displays on my screen. I suppose that the time taken depends upon the sophistication (or lack thereof) of my computer system :-)
Tesro .32
Interesting to watch.
I have been chasing a feed/malfunction fault on the Tesro .32 (and to some extent the .22) and some time ago determined it was the slide hold open lock that was clipping the slide during recoil.
This I believe was also causing the early slides to crack near the cutout.
I increased the spring size and deepened the slot and fixed the problem.
The video shows this happening in slow motion and the slide lock actually bounces up twice during recoil.
The fix was sent to Tesro (I do not know if it is included in the latest pistols, I have not seen a new one for a while).
Nearly all the bugs are out of the Tesro's now and they are competition read. Next job, to get it to group at 50 yds and convert the mags to 6 rounds.
I have been chasing a feed/malfunction fault on the Tesro .32 (and to some extent the .22) and some time ago determined it was the slide hold open lock that was clipping the slide during recoil.
This I believe was also causing the early slides to crack near the cutout.
I increased the spring size and deepened the slot and fixed the problem.
The video shows this happening in slow motion and the slide lock actually bounces up twice during recoil.
The fix was sent to Tesro (I do not know if it is included in the latest pistols, I have not seen a new one for a while).
Nearly all the bugs are out of the Tesro's now and they are competition read. Next job, to get it to group at 50 yds and convert the mags to 6 rounds.
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- Posts: 212
- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2004 4:03 pm
- Location: Okanagan Valley, British Columbia
Six rounds
OK, David, I'll bite. Why six rounds? Presumably not an ISSF or NRA (Conventional Pistol) or IPSC event.
Re: 6 rounds
(Pistol Australia) Service Pistol has minimum 9mm calibre and minimum Power Factor or 120 000.David M wrote:Hi Mike,
We have a match called Service pistol (similar to WA 1500 or the FBI police and services match).
The Service Pistol Unrestricted event allows .32 and has no Power Factor requirement.
Both these 90-shot events have 6-shot strings.
Spencer