Talk:Ballistic coefficient
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Maybe a list with common ammunition types / bullets would be not bad. - Jack's Revenge 20:28, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Winchester Advertisement?
The part on the .270 Winchester sounds like an ad. Rather than talking about cartridges, individual bullets should be mentioned (caliber and weight) with a range of BCs available by the common manufacturers (Sierra, Speer, Hornady, Lapua, Berger, ...)
Like... Caliber / Weight / Common BC range 6.5mm / 130gr / 0.495-0.571 6.5mm / 140gr /......
Possibly more of an addition to a "list" page.
Or shrink it down to the 5 calibers with the highest BCs by common manufacturers and the 5 calibers with the lowest BCs by common manufacturers.
[edit] Launch vehicles
Would it make sense to add a section discussing rocket launches? Isn't the reason a rocket is shaped like a bullet because that optimizes the ballistic coefficient? Also, in both cases is there a tie-in with the center of gravity/center of propulsion concept that could be covered? Sdsds 18:56, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
- The main reason a lot of launch vehicles are tall and narrow is for transportation reasons. If they made the vehicle wider then they wouldn't be able to deliver it from the factory to the launch site. Other than that, aerolosses during ascent are inversely proportional to ballistic coefficient, which in turn is essentially proportional to vehicle length. For a dense-fuelled vehicle about 20m long there are roughly 300 m/s losses. For liquid hydrogen stages, the vehicles need to be proportionately longer, because the density of the vehicle is lower.WolfKeeper 19:45, 26 March 2007 (UTC)