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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Remington 700 long range.
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<blockquote data-quote="MudRunner2005" data-source="post: 1138704" data-attributes="member: 12995"><p>Other than when the firing pin hits the primer, yes, until the recoil is felt. Unless you flinch, in which case, your action causes an equal and opposite reaction BEFORE the primer is ever ignited, before the bullet ever begins its journey down the bore.</p><p></p><p>The best I can figure it, If you have a 24" barrel, and the bullet leaves the muzzle at 3,000 fps average, it spends around 2/100th's (0.02) of a second in the bore. So, recoil, like sound, has a delayed reaction from the time the initial action is created. The bullet has long been out of the muzzle by the time the shooter actually feels any recoil. If you watch a lot of super-slow motion videos of people shooting guns, you will see that the bullet leaves the bore before the gun ever even moves.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MudRunner2005, post: 1138704, member: 12995"] Other than when the firing pin hits the primer, yes, until the recoil is felt. Unless you flinch, in which case, your action causes an equal and opposite reaction BEFORE the primer is ever ignited, before the bullet ever begins its journey down the bore. The best I can figure it, If you have a 24" barrel, and the bullet leaves the muzzle at 3,000 fps average, it spends around 2/100th's (0.02) of a second in the bore. So, recoil, like sound, has a delayed reaction from the time the initial action is created. The bullet has long been out of the muzzle by the time the shooter actually feels any recoil. If you watch a lot of super-slow motion videos of people shooting guns, you will see that the bullet leaves the bore before the gun ever even moves. [/QUOTE]
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Remington 700 long range.
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