Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

Hollow-base bullet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
.38 special wadcutters. On the right is an unloaded 148 grain hollow-base wadcutter bullet.
From left to right: .577 Enfield Minie Bullet, Burton Pattern Minie Bullets, .58 Springfield (x 2), Williams Bullet missing zinc base, .69 Caliber Minie Bullet. Tamisier grooves are visible.

A hollow-base bullet is a firearm bullet with a pit or hollow in its base which expands upon being fired, forcing the base to engage with the barrel grooves and obturating the bore more as the bullet travels through the barrel.[1][2] Hollowing the base makes the bullet more front-heavy, which improves aerodynamic stability and accuracy.

History

[edit]

Two men have been credited with the invention of the hollow-base bullet: Captain Claude-Étienne Minié of the French Army and William Greener.[3][4][5] The initial reason for developing a hollow-base bullet was to improve usability and performance of muzzle-loading rifles using black powder propellant.[1]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • Fadala, Sam (2006). Ramage, Ken (ed.). The Complete Blackpowder Handbook (5th ed.). Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications. ISBN 978-0-89689-390-0.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Fadala, 2006. p. 144. Quote: "Several undersized conical bullets came to the fore, but the one making in most often into books on gun history is the Minie. Not only is this bullet undersized for improved ease of loading, but upon firing it engages the rifling because of the phenomenon noted several times in this book–obturation."
  2. ^ Fadala, 2006. p. 144. Quote: "The bullet at rest (inertia) tends to remain at rest even when bumped in the behind by a terrific force delivered by the expanding gas of the detonated powder charge. Now if that bullet had a hollow base resulting in a “skirt,” the force of gases could expand that skirt to make contact with the rifling."
  3. ^ Fadala, 2006. p. 144. Quote: "There is another problem with Minie's claim to have invented the hollow-base conical bullet. Greener, a well-known gunner of his era, claimed that he invented the bullet credited to Minie. And it may be so. The English courts were satisfied that Greener was right, awarding him damages. The English government would never have doled out the cash if Greener could not prove his case."
  4. ^ Fadala, 2006. p. 392. Quote: "The story of W. Greener and W.W. Greener runs concurrently. To this day, W.W. Greener's book, The Gun, is read with enthusiasm by students of firearms. W.W. Greener was the son of W. Greener (William), who was known as an experimenter in his time."
  5. ^ Fadala, 2006. p. 392. Quote: "W. Greener also invented the hollow-base bullet credited to Captain C.E. Minie of the French Army. To this day, we call that blackpowder projectile type the Minie ball. But in fact, W. Greener won a lawsuit proving that his hollow-base bullet came first. Bucknell reported that W. Greener's “greatest achievement in gunnery was the discovery of the expanding principle for muzzle-loading rifle bullets.”"