Just for giggles, today after I got back from a Squirrel hunt I decided to see what my Talon P sounded like at 100 yards. The gun is running a moderator design I call the "Krait". The moderator is 40mm x 127mm and is for all practical purposes an enlarged "Ember" which we have had so much success with.
I expected I'd be able to show that the gun was almost undetectable at 100 yards. I got out the LASER and went next door to shoot thinking the yard there was 100 yards long but it wasn't it was 85 yards so I ran with that. A little math and I'd be able to talk about the noise level of the gun at 100 yards, or so I thought.
The gun is shooting JSB 15.89s at 800 fps. I tweaked the tune a bit yesterday and reduced the muzzle energy from 26 fpe to about 22 fpe. I noticed it quieted the gun some. Today when I was hunting I took a couple of practice shots and thought to myself, "Man! That is quiet. I wonder if something is wrong."
In Chairgun the time of flight works out to 357 ms at 85 yards. The temperature today was around 50 degrees F and I am at sea level so the speed of sound was real close to 1100 fps. It takes 232 ms for sound to travel 85 yards under those conditions. We can use this information to calculate that the sound of the shot should arrive at the target about 125 ms before the pellet does. So if we look at the time line we can identify the actual sound of the shot and calculate the power of that impulse.
Here is a shot being fired so that the pellet passes over the microphone and strikes a bush about 20 feet behind it. Play it at half speed.
You will notice that you do not hear the sound of the shot, just the zip of the pellet passing over the microphone.
I have reduced the speed to 25% in this next cut of the sample. You can just hear the sound of the shot at the beginning of the "zzziiiiippppp" sound. If you slow this cut to half speed you will be listening to the actual sound at 1/8th speed. You can clearly hear the shot but hey... ain't nobody gonna hear that unless they are listening for it with a "Big Ear".
Here is the graph of that sound from Audacity.
I expected I'd be able to show that the gun was almost undetectable at 100 yards. I got out the LASER and went next door to shoot thinking the yard there was 100 yards long but it wasn't it was 85 yards so I ran with that. A little math and I'd be able to talk about the noise level of the gun at 100 yards, or so I thought.
The gun is shooting JSB 15.89s at 800 fps. I tweaked the tune a bit yesterday and reduced the muzzle energy from 26 fpe to about 22 fpe. I noticed it quieted the gun some. Today when I was hunting I took a couple of practice shots and thought to myself, "Man! That is quiet. I wonder if something is wrong."
In Chairgun the time of flight works out to 357 ms at 85 yards. The temperature today was around 50 degrees F and I am at sea level so the speed of sound was real close to 1100 fps. It takes 232 ms for sound to travel 85 yards under those conditions. We can use this information to calculate that the sound of the shot should arrive at the target about 125 ms before the pellet does. So if we look at the time line we can identify the actual sound of the shot and calculate the power of that impulse.
Here is a shot being fired so that the pellet passes over the microphone and strikes a bush about 20 feet behind it. Play it at half speed.
You will notice that you do not hear the sound of the shot, just the zip of the pellet passing over the microphone.
I have reduced the speed to 25% in this next cut of the sample. You can just hear the sound of the shot at the beginning of the "zzziiiiippppp" sound. If you slow this cut to half speed you will be listening to the actual sound at 1/8th speed. You can clearly hear the shot but hey... ain't nobody gonna hear that unless they are listening for it with a "Big Ear".
Here is the graph of that sound from Audacity.
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