KNo3, sulfur and charcoal is composition of black powder, The gun will blow in your face because modern firearm barrel have rifling and black powder is fast burn, they wil exploding the chamber
Single based propellants: Nitrocellulose (+ additives) Double base propellant: Nitrocellulose + Nitroglycerine (+ additives) Triple base propellants: NC + NG + NGu (Nitroguanidine) (+additives) The first two are smokeless powders, the last one isn't. Small arms usually use single base propellant. Some use double base but that is mostly used for larger calibres (and mortars). [have shot a Browning HP 9mm loaded with double-base myself in the test-lab for propellants). Triple based is used for the largest calibres. The third base reduces the temperature and therefore barrel-wear while maintaining a high chamber-pressure. This comes at the cost of extra smoke. Large naval guns used this propellant as their large calibre has barrel-wear as a major factor in accuracy. Barium nitrate is used as tracer in some rounds (it is also used in fire-works for the 'apple-green'-colour)
A lot of effort went into this but there are a couple of gross inaccuracies. Most egregious is, modern cartridges do not use "black power" made of potassium nitrate, sulfur and carbon. They use smokeless powder, which is typically a combination of nitrated compounds(nitro cellulose and nitro glycerin) and additive chemicals that help control the burn rate, fouling, etc. But I do love the animation and narration style. (edited to correct a mistake I made in writing late an night. :)
Amazing. 97% of videos as well as commenters describe the rapid burning of powder as "explosion ", without knowing the definition of explosion. It rapidly burns, doesn't "explode". Well done. ☆
In case anyone is planning to use this video as reference material, it’s worth noting that the bullet & powder weight and velocity specs given are for 9mm Luger cartridges or others very similar to it (common cartridges in use today can fire bullets weighing anywhere from 17 to 400 grains or more, for example).
Whatever to all the haters. Cool animation. People might be surprised by how many folks actually believe the entire cartridge exits the barrel. This clearly shows what actually happens.
That's true, I'm from Belgium and grew up close to an old military training ground. Me and my friends found multiple "bullets" there, meaning only the cartridge. I once took one to school and the teacher was terrified and thought it might 'go off'. Her understanding of bullets was so low she didn't know she was just looking at an already used cartridge.
@@jhwhthemerciful Well even it was a unused cartridge and youake it go by using some hammer it won't do much harm forget about wounding anyone the speed of propelled bullet would be much slow to cause any harm
@@BenState lol, just the shotgun (for shotsells) has no rifled barrel. All other bullet-based firearms have rifled barrels, budy. What it means ALL THE BULLETS spin.
Also, the lead part of the bullet is usually hollow so as to be able to fill it with a much stronger material depending on the operational needs. Most commonly used core materials are liberty, justice and democracy.
This is exactly what I was thinking of for launching an O’Neill cylinder from another, to Mars, Venus, or Mercury. The cylinder it is pushing off of needs to be sufficiently massive, or have another attached to anchor it
Should be "How AMMUNITION Works." Bullets are only one part of AMMUNITION. The chemicals listed are for black powder which explodes. Modern smokeless powders are based on nitrocellulose and nitroglycerine compounds and are flammable solids and do not explode. At least you got the "burn" part right.
When I was a teen way way back, I found a maybe six inch narrow round pipe. And I made something out of wood to crudely resemble a cannon holder. I put a firecracker in the back and bb in the front and lit the firecracker and to my surprise it worked like a cannon.
You said the bullet is designed for good aerodynamics. Semi-Wadcutter bullets are not designed for good aerodynamics. They are designed solely to punch clean holes in paper targets.
@@Mr.Kumar1As a UA-cam expert I can confirm this is an AI voice, or this guy would be narrating videos 25 hours a day, 8 days a week. (This voice is used in many videos)
a bullet is the projectile, the entire assembly of casing, primer, propellant and bullet form a cartridge. At least do the work to get the terminology right!
Right away I can spot errors. This is NOT a bullet, it is a cartridge. A cartridge consists of the primer, cartridge case, propellant load (powder) and at the very end is the actual bullet!
The face of the slide, in the 9mm Luger exemplar used here. The firing pin comes through a hole in the face of the slide to strike the primer. The gas expansion pushes the bullet forward, and the gas also pushes the case backward until the case head meets the face of the slide.
The primer is sensitive to impact. When it's struck, it bursts into flame and sends incandescent gasses and flaming particles through the flash hole to heat and ignite the powder.
@@ArmadaHub hm, interesting, so a form of cordite would work better, then? Because I know of it but have no clue in how easy it is to manufacture or make at home. (I’m studying this in school; I’m going to be a weapons manufacturer when I graduate, so this is solely for education and science purposes).
Your very first line of dialog is incorrect. You are showing a photograph of a Metallic Cartridge. A bullet is one components of a cartridge. The illustration you provide for the powder is not correct either. Powder is made up off small bits that are (generally) either round or tubular. The formula you give, is for Black Powder, which is rarely used today except in reproductions of (mostly) Civil War weapons. The first projectiles were round stones. Later these evolved into lead, and eventually they were clad in copper. Some bullets are made of lead, copper, and steel. Some bullets are 100% lead, some are 100% copper, some are lead coated with copper, and some are made entirely of steel. Some modern military bullets have a steel "penetrator" in their center. There is a huge amount of history involved prior to the modern brass cartridge being developed. Even you title is wrong. At the most you have described the components of a cartridge, although your description of the powder is incorrect both as drawn and described. You should withdraw this and create a correct video describing the components of modern metallic cartridges. The newest cartridges in use are made of both high strength steel and brass. But gun for many years fired bullets that were not encased. They were inserted into a barrel that already had powder in it. Early guns used a burning match to ignite the powder. Nothing in this video describes how bullets work. That is referred to as terminal ballistics.
The powder you describe is black powder. No longer used in any modern cartridges. Modern smokeless powders are nitroglycerin based.
No! Modern powder is nitrocellulose based and depending of type of powder it may or may not contain nitroglycerin.
you’re all wrong modern cartridges use tiny little men that swing at the bullet with a baseball bat
@@OlafRoosteryes, but it is a little more dangerous than traditional black powder because it contains Barium powder
KNo3, sulfur and charcoal is composition of black powder,
The gun will blow in your face because modern firearm barrel have rifling and black powder is fast burn, they wil exploding the chamber
Single based propellants: Nitrocellulose (+ additives)
Double base propellant: Nitrocellulose + Nitroglycerine (+ additives)
Triple base propellants: NC + NG + NGu (Nitroguanidine) (+additives)
The first two are smokeless powders, the last one isn't.
Small arms usually use single base propellant.
Some use double base but that is mostly used for larger calibres (and mortars). [have shot a Browning HP 9mm loaded with double-base myself in the test-lab for propellants).
Triple based is used for the largest calibres. The third base reduces the temperature and therefore barrel-wear while maintaining a high chamber-pressure. This comes at the cost of extra smoke. Large naval guns used this propellant as their large calibre has barrel-wear as a major factor in accuracy.
Barium nitrate is used as tracer in some rounds (it is also used in fire-works for the 'apple-green'-colour)
It’s awesome tbh like the person who created guns and bullets is genius!
They Must Have Been Really Angry Though.
CREMINAL MIND
wait until you find out how thermite was invented
A lot of effort went into this but there are a couple of gross inaccuracies. Most egregious is, modern cartridges do not use "black power" made of potassium nitrate, sulfur and carbon. They use smokeless powder, which is typically a combination of nitrated compounds(nitro cellulose and nitro glycerin) and additive chemicals that help control the burn rate, fouling, etc. But I do love the animation and narration style. (edited to correct a mistake I made in writing late an night. :)
Amazing. 97% of videos as well as commenters describe the rapid burning of powder as "explosion ", without knowing the definition of explosion. It rapidly burns, doesn't "explode". Well done. ☆
@@fjb4932isn't explode just very super fast burn?
The whole thing is called a Cartridge or simply ammunition. Pretty good graphics and explanation.
And all this happens just in a blink of an eye...
Faster then that.
We are the only creature on earth that find glitch
@@Derwakoriginalguywhat's the glitch? 😂😂😂
faster than that like way faster than that
Nice, simple, and straight to the point 👍
In case anyone is planning to use this video as reference material, it’s worth noting that the bullet & powder weight and velocity specs given are for 9mm Luger cartridges or others very similar to it (common cartridges in use today can fire bullets weighing anywhere from 17 to 400 grains or more, for example).
Odlicna animacija.
Best depiction of a working cartridge. Emmy award material. Thank you.
Watching this for "Firearm Injuries" chapter of forensic medicine. Thank you for the video, it was easy to visualise
Whatever to all the haters. Cool animation. People might be surprised by how many folks actually believe the entire cartridge exits the barrel. This clearly shows what actually happens.
Except for the spin of the bullet as it travels out of the barrel.
That's true, I'm from Belgium and grew up close to an old military training ground. Me and my friends found multiple "bullets" there, meaning only the cartridge. I once took one to school and the teacher was terrified and thought it might 'go off'. Her understanding of bullets was so low she didn't know she was just looking at an already used cartridge.
@@jhwhthemerciful Well even it was a unused cartridge and youake it go by using some hammer it won't do much harm forget about wounding anyone the speed of propelled bullet would be much slow to cause any harm
@@Jose-jz7br If its not a rifle, it doesn't spin.
@@BenState lol, just the shotgun (for shotsells) has no rifled barrel. All other bullet-based firearms have rifled barrels, budy. What it means ALL THE BULLETS spin.
Also, the lead part of the bullet is usually hollow so as to be able to fill it with a much stronger material depending on the operational needs. Most commonly used core materials are liberty, justice and democracy.
and insurrection
This is how a CARTRIDGE works!
Very good animation. Propellant is the correct spelling.
And one day the humanity just got the power of 1000 spears in only one hand....
How fast is this reaction in microseconds?
Thank you. I've always wondered about this. I thought the whole dang thing went down the barrel of the gun. Excellent video
This is exactly what I was thinking of for launching an O’Neill cylinder from another, to Mars, Venus, or Mercury.
The cylinder it is pushing off of needs to be sufficiently massive, or have another attached to anchor it
You guys should make a lot of videos. It's very educational, we'd love to see more from you AMADAHUB
Thank you Emmanuel. We will try our best.
@@ArmadaHub You're always welcome 😊
@@ArmadaHub While you're at it, make them accurate instead of full of misleading information.
Excellent video!
The Cartridges is a 9 x 19 mm. Parabellum !
Fantastic animation! ... But, all 4 components (in this video) make up, what is correctly called a Cartridge.
....true, but I believe the most common term is "round"......
Great information.
Thanks for this 👍
Should be "How AMMUNITION Works." Bullets are only one part of AMMUNITION. The chemicals listed are for black powder which explodes. Modern smokeless powders are based on nitrocellulose and nitroglycerine compounds and are flammable solids and do not explode. At least you got the "burn" part right.
smokeless powder is an explosive not a flammable solid
Good 👍
Thx a lot
When I was a teen way way back, I found a maybe six inch narrow round pipe. And I made something out of wood to crudely resemble a cannon holder. I put a firecracker in the back and bb in the front and lit the firecracker and to my surprise it worked like a cannon.
"Sir you haven't been paying taxes for the last 6 yea-"
That's Not A Reason To...😢
To think in the old days. A musket was a giant cartridge.
You said the bullet is designed for good aerodynamics. Semi-Wadcutter bullets are not designed for good aerodynamics. They are designed solely to punch clean holes in paper targets.
It's all happen a fraction of seconds
separate primer video?
I will add that to the checklist. Currently working on pepper sprays.
Whose voice or narration is this? He sounds good
In bed?😂
It's an AI voice
@@CatsMeowPaw Are you sure?
@@Mr.Kumar1As a UA-cam expert I can confirm this is an AI voice, or this guy would be narrating videos 25 hours a day, 8 days a week. (This voice is used in many videos)
@@jhwhthemercifulhe sounds like he really knows what he's talking about about, not generic
Good explain
Thx soldier
What is the difference from grains and grams?
do a video on explaining why there is a recoil in a gun
a bullet is the projectile, the entire assembly of casing, primer, propellant and bullet form a cartridge. At least do the work to get the terminology right!
Good job 👍❤❤
The secret is the chamber of the weapon which FORCES all of that energy in a single direction.
Right away I can spot errors. This is NOT a bullet, it is a cartridge. A cartridge consists of the primer, cartridge case, propellant load (powder) and at the very end is the actual bullet!
Yea. he said that.
What stops the primer being pushed out the back?
The face of the slide, in the 9mm Luger exemplar used here.
The firing pin comes through a hole in the face of the slide to strike the primer. The gas expansion pushes the bullet forward, and the gas also pushes the case backward until the case head meets the face of the slide.
Nice
@@DaniloDampor-l1o Thank you.
Primer is a spark or a powder
You didn’t mention how long all process take from hitting the igniter to projectile leaving the casing?!!
Milliseconds
And all done at a fraction of a second. Blink and you missed it.
more like this on guns and ammo
Coming soon with more content
Coming soon with more content
i cant not hear free bird while watching this video
Free Piston 👍🏼 concept
Grounder or Grounded piston = Mobil engine V 8
Could be a little longer video
0:04 0:10 0:22 ❤ 0:22
Me encanta 👍👍👍👍 pero podrías traducir por favor 🙏🙏🙏🙏
How does the primer explode when hit by the firing pin?
The primer is sensitive to impact. When it's struck, it bursts into flame and sends incandescent gasses and flaming particles through the flash hole to heat and ignite the powder.
Basis high school will tell, black powder is no longer used..... what a waste if time!
It's still used but only by dedicated die-hard fans.
عالی بود
nice
Cartridge=bullet case powder primer. A cartridge is not a bullet. Is this Hollywood?
This is Bollywood William.
@@ArmadaHub endia?
No, it’s Kansas
i thought the propellant wasnt a whole full cartridgge worth like half full sloshing around in there.
💪🔥🔥
Dang, I just thought it was magic.
The music is way too loud!
Forgot the barrel rifling
Topi a gala istilu fafela😁😁😁😄😎
what seal? where?
Good info
no one: if mw2 technology eas real
Understood
Best
I wanted more detail about the primer and didn't need the dramatic music.
Gases actually escape the barrel first before the bullet.
And all of it happens in the friction of the second.
I use Propane bullets
I think I know how make the bullet more power exploded..
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
That is not a bullet. It is a round of ammunition.
How about bullet from nuclear substance and the same from operation exlopsion of big bombe nuclear
me explaining my 100% off coupon to Walmart employee
So, would solid nitroglycerin work for this? Because I know it’s very volatile.
Probably not. Easy to leak corrode and the production price would be really high.
@@ArmadaHub hm, interesting, so a form of cordite would work better, then? Because I know of it but have no clue in how easy it is to manufacture or make at home. (I’m studying this in school; I’m going to be a weapons manufacturer when I graduate, so this is solely for education and science purposes).
Стабильность она новая или старая вероятно это программа её повышения прокинутая с 1961 года не хуя не изменилось кроме стабильности!
Видишь где нашёл?
Высрал?Походу ошмётки от погон
This animation is all wrong. All the components come out of the gun as one big projectile, I know because I saw it on TV news.
Is this a joke?
👍👍
Чуть не забыл видишь пьянь в лодке?А она есть!
И ещё одна деталь видишь украица?
Вова тоже поговаривают дожидается дожить до вечера что б понырять!А его нет!
Помокать нырять он ещё не настолько стар что б таких с слабыми найти!Разве что только в церкввях!
Cash or credit?
Me:
Plata ya plomo
الرصاصه،،قد تصيب،،،ولكن الرصاصه،ان لم تصيب،،قد توقظ،الغافل،،ليردها،قذائف قاتله،للعدو
💯
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
You mean how a cartridge works
Already know but want to see animation.
Bunch of gun nerds "ACKSHUALLY"ing here can go get some Canadian healthcare.
Cartridge. Bullet just a part. Casing, powder and primer are the others. You still need a firing pin or striker to start the process.
It's called smokeless powder it's way more reliable and it doesn't have to be packed like gun powder.
What millimeter was the bullet used in the video?
You dont care 😂😂 or you'd use your brain
Too bad the narrator is not a subject matter expert.
Cole Vista
Check ur lab who one produces
Your very first line of dialog is incorrect. You are showing a photograph of a Metallic Cartridge. A bullet is one components of a cartridge. The illustration you provide for the powder is not correct either. Powder is made up off small bits that are (generally) either round or tubular. The formula you give, is for Black Powder, which is rarely used today except in reproductions of (mostly) Civil War weapons.
The first projectiles were round stones. Later these evolved into lead, and eventually they were clad in copper. Some bullets are made of lead, copper, and steel. Some bullets are 100% lead, some are 100% copper, some are lead coated with copper, and some are made entirely of steel. Some modern military bullets have a steel "penetrator" in their center.
There is a huge amount of history involved prior to the modern brass cartridge being developed. Even you title is wrong. At the most you have described the components of a cartridge, although your description of the powder is incorrect both as drawn and described.
You should withdraw this and create a correct video describing the components of modern metallic cartridges. The newest cartridges in use are made of both high strength steel and brass. But gun for many years fired bullets that were not encased. They were inserted into a barrel that already had powder in it. Early guns used a burning match to ignite the powder.
Nothing in this video describes how bullets work. That is referred to as terminal ballistics.
A round. Not a bullet.
Non, pas possible. Ce n'est plus de la poudre noire depuis longtemps !!!
Kessler Heights
Can you guys make videos about how automatic guns work?
Anyway, nice work, guys. Keep going
Definitely. They are on list for the upcoming videos.
@@ArmadaHubwhat about snipers?
Now if they could only get nuclear fusion in there bullit hit's moon shooter explodes