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would it just fly of the curviture of the earth

2007-02-10 08:18:02 · 17 answers · asked by bretts 1 in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

17 answers

That depends to calibre, velocity, the gun and the angle you fire at, etc. Basically UP TO a mile or so and it will have hit the ground before the you can draw breath.

2007-02-10 08:25:46 · answer #1 · answered by Felidae 5 · 0 0

How long can a bullet travel without hitting anything? Your question is a bit ambigious so let me see if I'm understanding you right.

How long (as in distance) can a bullet travel that has not hit anything? That depends on the caliber. The old .22 Long Rifle ammo boxes had the legend: "Range 1 mile, be careful."

Distance would depend on bullet energy and weight. A .45-70 405 grain bullet is going to succumb to gravity quicker than a 120 grain .25-06 Remington.

How long (as in elapsed time) can a bullet travel that has not hit anything? That depends on the velocity of the bullet but the time would be measured in split seconds and seconds rather than minutes.

I hope that helped.

H

2007-02-10 10:43:48 · answer #2 · answered by H 7 · 0 0

Gravity acts on all bullets with an same stress. in case you carry a bullet in spite of the muzzle of the gun and launch it on an same excellent time as you fireplace a bullet from the gun element to the earth, both will hit the floor collectively. So, understanding that, you are able to carry a bullet on an same good because the muzzle of your gun and allow it drop. The length of time it takes to hit the floor is how lengthy a bluet fired from the gun will take to hit the floor. the version is that a bullet fired out of your gun will be faraway from the muzzle even as it hits while the bullet held and dropped will hit the floor at your feet. in case you doubt this or do exactly not comprehend it, get a physics textual content e book and seem it up. it really is a complication-free situation in physics and could be modern-day in all physics texts.

2016-11-26 21:48:58 · answer #3 · answered by zagel 4 · 0 0

About three seconds max. Doesn't matter what type or caliber it is. The effective ranges don't even reach the real horizon, let alone fly around the curvature of the Earth. At the ranges a bullet can fly, the Earth is for all intents perfectly flat.

2007-02-10 12:28:49 · answer #4 · answered by randkl 6 · 3 0

Believe it or not, gravity even works on a flying bullet. Let's say you are out in the middle of the desert, so there are no trees or hills to stop the bullet from flying. Gravity pulls things towards the earth at the rate of 32 ft/sec/sec. In physics, distance = acceleration * time*time + original velocity *time. Original velocity = 0, so 5 = 32 * t^2. time = SQRT (5/32). So, that is about 0.4 seconds. Since bullets travel so fast in a horizontal direction, they can typically hit the target aimed at in close distances withuot having to take gravity into account.

2007-02-10 08:26:55 · answer #5 · answered by Mark S 3 · 2 1

The .22 long rifle bullet can be dangerous up to a mile. 30'06 can travel 5 miles or more. They can't follow the earth's curvature. That is too vast. A battleship's big guns can fire and hit targets to 26 miles. Hitler built the massive "Paris gun" which could bombard Paris from 90 miles away

2007-02-10 14:45:56 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

If the gun is fired level with the horizon and the area was of the same altitude, the bullet will remain airborne the same amount of time as a bullet dropped from the same height as the gun. It does not make a difference on the amount of powder in the case. Gravity has the same effect on both bullets.

2007-02-10 19:51:41 · answer #7 · answered by Jon 4 · 1 1

It would hit the ground before it went around the earth. If you had an endless distance and completely got rid of ALL gravity and ALL wind resistance (eliminating any friction at all, which is impossible) it THEORETICALLY would travel forever. Make sure you understand that situation cannot happen at this time, with current technology.

2007-02-10 14:25:44 · answer #8 · answered by Colter B 5 · 0 0

Believe me; I looked at all angles before replying to this question.... Living in Colorado, we know aspens. The leaves are not the problem. They are so heavily populated that in only 25-30 yards, you could not get a rifle bullet to travel 30 yards without hitting the tree itself. I think clear line of site was being confused with (as the crow flies)

2007-02-10 08:28:34 · answer #9 · answered by ? 2 · 0 2

It all depends on inertia.

The more force applied to the bullet when it was set off the further it would go. If enough force was applied to it it would orbit the earth if nothing got in it's way.

2007-02-10 08:28:37 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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