Walt Sherrill
New member
We've had two lengthy discussions here in recent months on the effect heavier rounds have on point of impact. The consensus was that with revolvers, where recoil against the frame is immediate, the barrel starts to rise as soon as recoil begins.
In the case of semi-autos, where there is rearward movement of the slide and barrel, there is some delay of recoil force to the frame, and only modest contact with the frame (via recoil spring compresion) until after the bullet has left the barrel. With semi-autos, some here claim that barrel rise is immediate, while others claim it is trivial, with little effect on the point of impact. Barrel rise is very obvious after the bullet has left the barrel (which typically happens before the slide has moved a small fraction of an inch [.10"]). In super slow-motion videos, barrel rise is not obvious until after the bullet has left the barrel, but even seemingly trivial amounts of barrel rise can have a big effect down range.
So we've had lots of opinions and claims, but no real evidence offered. (It was JUST OBVIOUS to parties on either side of the debate.) I've been on both sides of this debate, and have been called all sorts of names on other forums for even questioning whether heavier bullets do, in fact, hit higher when fired from semi-autos.
I tried my experiment yesterday -- after finally finally finding the necessary ammo at a Gun Show this past weekend. None of our local shops had 124 or 147 gr 9mm rounds (except in the higher $dollar SD rounds, and I'm not flush with cash...)
These results are NOT definitive, and I may not have done things correctly, but I'll show the results, here. You folks can then tell me what I did wrong, and offer counter evidence to show the errors of my attempt. I posted this on another forum earlier today. I wish the groups were smaller -- but with my impaired vision I was happy to be hitting the black center at 40 feet.
Your main conclusion may be that I'm not that great a shot... and I'll agree. The gun was more up to the task than I was.
_______________________________________________________
About different bullet weights causing different points of impact with semi-autos.
I had stated, earlier in this discussion, that I had never really questioned the claim that heavier bullets tended to hit higher. I didn't change bullet weights that much and didn't hand load. I never really noticed that much difference between 115 gr and 124 gr rounds, and almost never shot 147 gr.
I knew that points of impact did rise with weight in revolvers, but accepted it to be true with semi-autos.
I gave it a try, yesterday, and I'm not sure I did anything to resolve the issue, except to show that at the distance I was shooting, there wasn't an OBVIOUS difference.
In every case I used the same gun (an M&P Pro 9mm with a lot of Apex upgrades) and tried to get exactly the same sight picture and point of aim on the the targets. I shot seated, from a rest, with my hands resting on a firm padded rest.
I loaded up 16 rounds of 9mm: one 115gr (for the first shot, off target) then 115gr, 124gr, 147 gr, 115gr, 124gr, 147gr, repeated four times. I moved from left to right, one shot on each target, and the moved back to the left to the first target and repeated the shots. All three targets were mounted on the same target hanger. (I had to pull them off to run them through my scanner...It doesn't like a very WIDE (or long) document.
I had the targets set at about 40' -- not the 50' indicated on the targets. The lighting at the indoor range where I shoot is mediocre for precision shooting, but great for combat-simulations. At about 40' My eyesight is at its limits. (I get cataract surgery next spring for my "strong" eye -- I'm right eye dominant -- and that should help me a good bit.) I had left eye cataract surgery done several years ago, and it was great.
Before I started I tried using my Merit Optical Attachment (an aperture that can be attached to your glasses with a suction cup.) It worked for me in the past, when my eyes were better, but it wasn't a help today -- while it did make the sights and target a bit clearer, it also proved more aggravating than helpful. I took it off.
Here's the results of my efforts, five shots per target, weight of bullet noted at the top of each target. ONLY that weight bullet appears on that target. Maybe if the distance was greater, the results might have been more obviously different.
Note: at one point, I jerked a 124 gr. shot, marked it on the target -- high left -- reloaded a 124 gr round, chambered a 115 gr round to reset the gun (fired off target), and continued. When I scanned the targets, I covered that errant round, which was near the handwritten "24" at the top of the target. (Duh!)
In the case of semi-autos, where there is rearward movement of the slide and barrel, there is some delay of recoil force to the frame, and only modest contact with the frame (via recoil spring compresion) until after the bullet has left the barrel. With semi-autos, some here claim that barrel rise is immediate, while others claim it is trivial, with little effect on the point of impact. Barrel rise is very obvious after the bullet has left the barrel (which typically happens before the slide has moved a small fraction of an inch [.10"]). In super slow-motion videos, barrel rise is not obvious until after the bullet has left the barrel, but even seemingly trivial amounts of barrel rise can have a big effect down range.
So we've had lots of opinions and claims, but no real evidence offered. (It was JUST OBVIOUS to parties on either side of the debate.) I've been on both sides of this debate, and have been called all sorts of names on other forums for even questioning whether heavier bullets do, in fact, hit higher when fired from semi-autos.
I tried my experiment yesterday -- after finally finally finding the necessary ammo at a Gun Show this past weekend. None of our local shops had 124 or 147 gr 9mm rounds (except in the higher $dollar SD rounds, and I'm not flush with cash...)
These results are NOT definitive, and I may not have done things correctly, but I'll show the results, here. You folks can then tell me what I did wrong, and offer counter evidence to show the errors of my attempt. I posted this on another forum earlier today. I wish the groups were smaller -- but with my impaired vision I was happy to be hitting the black center at 40 feet.
Your main conclusion may be that I'm not that great a shot... and I'll agree. The gun was more up to the task than I was.
_______________________________________________________
About different bullet weights causing different points of impact with semi-autos.
I had stated, earlier in this discussion, that I had never really questioned the claim that heavier bullets tended to hit higher. I didn't change bullet weights that much and didn't hand load. I never really noticed that much difference between 115 gr and 124 gr rounds, and almost never shot 147 gr.
I knew that points of impact did rise with weight in revolvers, but accepted it to be true with semi-autos.
I gave it a try, yesterday, and I'm not sure I did anything to resolve the issue, except to show that at the distance I was shooting, there wasn't an OBVIOUS difference.
In every case I used the same gun (an M&P Pro 9mm with a lot of Apex upgrades) and tried to get exactly the same sight picture and point of aim on the the targets. I shot seated, from a rest, with my hands resting on a firm padded rest.
I loaded up 16 rounds of 9mm: one 115gr (for the first shot, off target) then 115gr, 124gr, 147 gr, 115gr, 124gr, 147gr, repeated four times. I moved from left to right, one shot on each target, and the moved back to the left to the first target and repeated the shots. All three targets were mounted on the same target hanger. (I had to pull them off to run them through my scanner...It doesn't like a very WIDE (or long) document.
I had the targets set at about 40' -- not the 50' indicated on the targets. The lighting at the indoor range where I shoot is mediocre for precision shooting, but great for combat-simulations. At about 40' My eyesight is at its limits. (I get cataract surgery next spring for my "strong" eye -- I'm right eye dominant -- and that should help me a good bit.) I had left eye cataract surgery done several years ago, and it was great.
Before I started I tried using my Merit Optical Attachment (an aperture that can be attached to your glasses with a suction cup.) It worked for me in the past, when my eyes were better, but it wasn't a help today -- while it did make the sights and target a bit clearer, it also proved more aggravating than helpful. I took it off.
Here's the results of my efforts, five shots per target, weight of bullet noted at the top of each target. ONLY that weight bullet appears on that target. Maybe if the distance was greater, the results might have been more obviously different.
Note: at one point, I jerked a 124 gr. shot, marked it on the target -- high left -- reloaded a 124 gr round, chambered a 115 gr round to reset the gun (fired off target), and continued. When I scanned the targets, I covered that errant round, which was near the handwritten "24" at the top of the target. (Duh!)