Steve and I spent the day timing the Nock Breech that Dan Phariss recently sent us. Actually we first finished up a test that was held over from the series on cupped breeches. We had timed the Chambers liner and cupped breech cleaning carefully between shots, but had not finished the dirty trial run. At the top of the spreadsheet is that test. We noted that the cupped breech was slower when compared to the flat breech in this trial. We reported this last time too. We have no explanation for this and report only that it was our finding. We do not know why this is true.
We saw that the numbers we were getting were slower and wondered if there was something about our work that caused it. So when the test was finished, we went back and tried the Chambers liner with the flat breech just to check ourselves. These are shown just below the cupped breech results, and confirm that the difference is real.
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With the Nock Breech testing, we chose to start with the Chambers liner and the Phariss liner with the large diameter hole (.090) and exterior cone. These distinctions are noted in the spread sheet, but from here on I’ll just call it the Phariss liner.
You will note that the barrel charge has been increased. We discussed this change with Dan and decided to find the volume of the chamber and antechamber and use that amount for the Nock’s barrel charge. We realize this changes a variable, but we wanted to test the Nock to its best advantage. Also we did not want a void between the powder and the sabot – which seated on the chamber lip.
We added a step to the loading process with the Nock. We wrapped the breech with a screw driver 4 times to settle powder into the antechamber. We could see a difference in the powder level in the chamber before and after doing this.
Cleaning after was done the same way as before. Using compressed air was the only unconventional step. Again we tested both cleaning carefully and doing no cleaning at all. The results for these tests are in the lower part of the spreadsheet.
(Showing the spreadsheet as a JPG may be a mistake. Hope it's readable. Not satisfied - redid it.) We were pleased with the way the Nock performed. We were concerned that it would be a headache to manage. However it handled both conditions quite well. The difference between clean and dirty trials was small. And NONE of these trials were slow to human senses. Even the slowest trials sounded the same.
Now a few quick comments:
There was much less smoke in the garage with the Nock even though we were using 50% more powder.
Ear plugs were necessary.
Please note trial 7 * on the Chambers clean trial. When cleaning after Trial 7, a large chunk of fouling was blown out of the barrel. So, after 2 slow trials and the chunk was gone the times returned to normal.
We got some interesting photos of the Nock in action.
This is a cone of fouling left when we carefully removed a WL liner.
Just fired - lights on.
Just fired - lights off
We have a couple more tests we want to run. We want to do a small diameter liner sent by Dan and a TC liner donated by Roundball here on ALR. The TC liner has a cavity in back and a exterior allen wrench-shaped cone.
We will wait to draw conclusions, but so far we like large diameter holes, large internal cavities (a la Chambers), and CLEAN vents.
We hope to finish the remaining liners with the Nock next week.
Regards,
Pletch