(Mods please move this if another section is more appropriate)
A question please for those more knowledgable than I. This question is was sparked by a NCIS episode.
If you have a squib load where where the first bullet is stuck in the barrel and then a second round (not a squib load) is fired which pushes both bullets out of the barrel do the bullets wind up having the same velocity or two different velocities. Supposedly the firearm in question was a 9mm semiautomatic.
I realize that this is much more of a theoretical question than an actual question, after all who is going to purposely make a gun have a bullet stuck in the barrel and then use a chronograph while firing another round, thereby risking destroying the gun, the chronograph and possibly injuring/killing the shooter. Not even sure a chronograph could measure two projectiles so close together.
Anyone with knowledge about this please respond. Thank you, NukemJim
A question please for those more knowledgable than I. This question is was sparked by a NCIS episode.
If you have a squib load where where the first bullet is stuck in the barrel and then a second round (not a squib load) is fired which pushes both bullets out of the barrel do the bullets wind up having the same velocity or two different velocities. Supposedly the firearm in question was a 9mm semiautomatic.
I realize that this is much more of a theoretical question than an actual question, after all who is going to purposely make a gun have a bullet stuck in the barrel and then use a chronograph while firing another round, thereby risking destroying the gun, the chronograph and possibly injuring/killing the shooter. Not even sure a chronograph could measure two projectiles so close together.
Anyone with knowledge about this please respond. Thank you, NukemJim