Perhaps thats an issue for the weapon geeks here ?
no offense to the weapon geeks here but thats how greatswords wound up 15lbs in dnd, and one suppliment i read printed for third ed dnd stated unequivically that the greatsword was used by holding the blade and bludgeoning your opponent with the handle. another showed a drawing of a daiyku (japanese longbow used by samurai) and completely ignored the fact the hand position is offset so it can be more easily used from horsback (thereby making it look like an oriental influenced english longbow instead of the unique item it actually is) and then stated it could
ONLY be used from horesback. so i decided to do something radical- try to learn a little about the physics involved before trying to break something down to dice rolls and paper sheets. many other gamer geeks see these issues, many dont, and from what i have seen a larger percentage just dont care either way.
i may be onto something, it may be that reality is just to frackin big for distillation, or i may be a wingnut wasting my time, but im havin fun so....
ok - when chemicals react, frequently gasses are part of the result. i am interested in the chemical reaction between O2, smokeless (anyone know the chemical formula for it, i think it is a derivitive of nitroglycerine). the reaction is started by heat and increased by pressure and additional heat. got that part. but instead of producing another clump of solid matter, the solids are residual, and the rest are hot gasses.
what am thinking is the "perfect" cpr weapon has a barrel length such that the projectile exits the barrel at the moment the gas pressure reaches ambient atm pressure, thereby imparting as close to 100% of the energy to the projectile as possible. (this is an "ideal case" situation)
the volume of the bore will determine the barrel length based upon the amount of propellant burned, and the weight of the projectile. and i just realized i am
way over thinking what i want.
thanks for the help anyway guys
hee....
