When you get into the cast bullet game, things get even more interesting. One of the finest cast bullets for .30 cal rifles is the Lyman 311041, which is a 170 grain flat nosed bullet, used for such things as the .30-30. Shooting it through a standard 1:10 twist barrel (which is the basic standard for .30 cal barrels today), it does well up to about 1800 fps or so. However, many of us, for pure accuracy, shoot it at about 1500 fps. If you jack the powder up and travel it at 2200 fps, accuracy goes out the window. Many of us theorize that the bullet is being pushed too fast and is starting to strip in the rifling . Others of us theorize that the bullet is never truly concentric and the additional rpms are making it unstable.
However, if you can find an old 1:12 or 1:14 barrel, the accuracy gets back to the better level.
at 2000 fps, a bullet going through a 1:10 barrel is spinning 14,400 rpm.
at 2000 fps, a bullet going through a 1:12 barrel is spinning 12,000 rpm.
If my math is correct. When you're playing with cast bullets, barrel twist becomes very important.
Nope, that's wrong. I forgot to carry a zero. The formula for calculating bullet rpm is
RPM = MV * 720/twist rate, where MV is the muzzle velocity.
at 2000 fps, a bullet going through a 1:10 barrel is spinning 144,000 rpm.
at 2000 fps, a bullet going through a 1:12 barrel is spinning 120,000 rpm.