In the May 20, 1976 issue of Machine Design there was an excellent article on the development of the velocity collar which appears on all modern artillery and tanks. Everytime an ammunition lot cha
anges, velocities are sufficiently different that target accuracy (velocity) has to be re-determined for the new lot. Used to be several rounds fired were required to do that. Someone determined the barrels stretch a minute amount (called "hoop stress") as the round progresses up the barrel. Attaching strain guages (SG) at a know distance from each other to detect the stress and presenting their data to a computer to measure time between hoop stretches instantly gave the velocity. The collars contain the SG's, magnets, springs and coils (to produce electricity to power the collar from the recoil) and a transmitter to send the info to the fire control computer.
AND...
During this same period Matt Swittlick did his breech pressure studies for the NSSA. They wanted to be sure they were NOT overstressing original 19th century tubes (of which they have many).
AND...
I was studying "upset" at a sand pile in a gravel pit. "Upset" is the sealing and swelling of a sabot or skirt or whatever into rifling by a muzzle-loaded projectile. It became apparent when that sealing took place, breech pressures went up dramatically. The report, recoil and other factors all supported higher pressure. And the dug-out slug witnessed whether upset/sealing had occurred or not.
SO...
Ever since that time, I have wanted test results using a cross-hatched strain guage at the bottom of a barrel to measure breech pressure combined with a series of strain guages mounted up the barrel every few inches all fed to a computer to gather data as a round is fired and progresses up the barrel. Just how much pressure, where, and when sealing took place would/could all be accuratley disclosed.
Anyone of us/you ever do anything like this? ? ? ? ?