Shooting to 4700 Yards With "The Fourteen Nine" & WTC Flat Line Bullets
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- Опубліковано 16 вер 2024
- Jon O'Neill, owner of 50 West Armory, has been dreaming of pushing the boundaries of long-range should-fired rifles for several years. In fact, he's tried to partner with several manufactures and spent a huge pile of money trying to make that dream a reality ... but for almost a decade he ran into issue after issue. But when he teamed up with Josh Kunz, the engineer who designed the new WTC Flat Line bullets, Jon finally started getting some traction. This month Jon and Josh went out to collect some velocity data at 2300 yards for a new 14.9mm cartridge and bullet they've been working on. They not only shot it to that distance, but they stretched it out to 4700 yards!!!
For info on this setup and the shot, visit PrecisionRifleBlog.com.
You have my admiration, you are doing a great job.
So, a .56 cal Bullet traveled 2.6 miles in 4 seconds?
This is just insane lol. ~1 MOA at up to 3 miles is what I'm hearing? Perfect for taking out ammo dumps or large fuel tanks from WAY beyond enemy lines, and more than enough to scare the shit out of anybody driving a technical. They would literally never know what hit them. Artillery when you don't have it, and air support when you need it. O.o
You do not know what hit you from 1000 yards, muchless 1760, muchless 1760 x 3
@@KevinWood44 Figuring out a general direction from the entrance and exit wounds going through multiple people isn't impossible. And as we found to our disadvantage in Afghanistan, a thousand yards will feel a lot smaller in the mountains than in an urban setting.
@@spdcrzy you would certainly know better than me but I was talking about if a bullet hit me (or close to me) from 1000 yards away I am not going to have a clue how far away it was shot from. Can you even hear the shot from that far? Assuming you survived the shot, the crack/bang only works within 450-500 yards right?
Is this Josh Kunz of Patriot Valley Arms? Like his Work!
You can be proud !
He just build me a stunning rifle !
Good morning Mr. Zant, I am writing to you here because I have not found any e-mails to tell you about: I have seen his test on PrecisionRifleblog about the riflescope contrast, I am doing something similar I would like to ask you: what are the dimensions of the sheets that used to print the "Snellen Chart" sheet? A3 or other dimensions? I have to test 2 riflescope at 100 (meters) and I want to make a paper print of the Snellen chart! Thank you in advance for your help.
all the fundamentals are off in this.
I'd imagine you'd have to tweak the fundamentals at least a LITTLE bit to avoid breaking bones with this thing.
??? nothing on this at your site yet ......
How much does it weights? Anything over 30lbs is just too heavy.
Why is anything over 30 lbs too heavy? You're not going to lug this thing through the jungle. The weight helps with recoil too and makes it so you can shoot it.