drewwizard
Airman
- 41
- Dec 31, 2016
The difference in ballistics at fighter ranges is very large. Look at a ballistic table, and see what a 500 yard drop is like between the two cartridges. We are likely talking 10s of feet. requires a little better ballistic compensator for the slower round. The deal breaker is the energy left at 500 yards. You either need speed and weight (14.5mm Russian), or explosive head (20mm and above) to deliver damage.The British 7mm was as mature as it was going to get in 1913-14, It had already been through a number of variations.
Altering the shape of the case does little or nothing despite some peoples claim to the contrary. It may make the cases harder to form.
Lowering the powder charge does work, but then "underpowering" the cartridge seems to be defeating the purpose. Making the velocity difference between the .303 and the .276 closer means a closer trajectory path and less difference to justify the change.
The difference in trajectory for long range rifle shooting has little application in air to air combat where the effective distances are much shorter. A few inches difference in impact on an aircraft fuselage?
The Japanese may have been happy with much less than eight .303s, the Italians were not, shifting to a pair of 12.7mm machine guns in the early/mid 30s, before the Hurricane and Spitfire first flew. The 12.7 was roughly 3 times more powerful on a round to round comparison.
The Italians failed to increase the rate of fire as time went on, although they did try using HE ammunition. The pair of synchronized machine guns might be equal to 3-4 synchronized .303. When mounted in the wing one 12.7 might be equal to two .303s. Yes less than eight .303s but the Itialians weren't happy" about it, they simply didn't have the engine power to carry any more. Their primary fighter engine, the Fiat AR 74, made roughly the same amount of power as the Bristol Mercury in the Gloster Gladiator.
They also tried fitting additional 7.7 machine guns at times.
Here is a bit of internal ballistics (what happens inside the gun) information. It is a bit simplified but bullet velocity is dependent on the pressure applied to the base of the bullet vs the weight of the bullet per unit of area (sectional density).
What this means is that using similar powders (to keep the burning curve the same) is that, due to the difference in diameter, you can accelerate a 145 grain 7mm bullet to the same speed as a 174 grain .303 bullet using the same pressure. If you want to use a 165 grain bullet in the 7mm you need more pressure, if you want higher velocity you need more pressure.
The smaller diameter bullet will have less room inside for incendiary materiel and it's AP qualities may be suspect, especially at anything other than a 90 degree impact. Long skinny bullets not doing so well at oblique impacts or penetrating after intermediate barriers. The US .50 having trouble with that one for instance.
The British, after the BoB, moving to a mix of 50% AP and 50% incendiary ammunition as fast as production would allow.