Dictionary Definition
recoil
Noun
1 the backward jerk of a gun when it is fired
[syn: kick]
Verb
1 draw back, as with fear or pain; "she flinched
when they showed the slaughtering of the calf" [syn: flinch, squinch, funk, cringe, shrink, wince, quail]
2 spring back; spring away from an impact; "The
rubber ball bounced"; "These particles do not resile but they unite
after they collide" [syn: bounce, resile, take a hop,
spring, bound, rebound, reverberate, ricochet]
3 spring back, as from a forceful thrust; "The
gun kicked back into my shoulder" [syn: kick back,
kick]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From reculer.Noun
Translations
- French: recul
Verb
- To pull back,
especially in disgust, horror or astonishment.
- He recoiled in disgust when he saw the mess.
Translations
to pull back, especially in disgust, horror or
astonishment
- French: reculer
- Portuguese: recuo, coice (da arma)
Extensive Definition
- ''This article is about backward momentum produced in firearms when fired. For other uses, go to Recoil (disambiguation)
Recoil, in common everyday language, is
considered the backward kick or force produced by a gun when it is
fired. In more precise scientific terms, this force is equal to the
time
derivative of the backward momentum resulting when a gun
is fired.
The backward momentum is equal to the mass of the gun times its reverse
velocity. This backward
momentum is equal to the sums of the two forward momentums by the
law of conservation
of momentum and is due to and equal to the projectile's mass
times its velocity added to the mass of the escaping gases, burnt
propellant, unburnt propellant, and other gases, times their
respective velocities. Provided that enough information is known
for how all the velocities vary versus time, it becomes
theoretically possible to determine all the accelerations versus
time, and hence to calculate the total recoil force versus time.
The force associated with the recoil may thus be calculated by
using the law of conservation of momentum, provided that enough
information regarding changes in momentum versus time is known. In
practice, however, it is often easier simply to measure the recoil
force resulting for a given load, rather than to estimate all the
variations occurring in momentum versus time.
In most small arms,
the force of the recoil is absorbed usually by the body of the
shooter; in heavier guns such as mounted machine guns
or cannons, the recoil is
absorbed by a mounting system.
Recoil versus energy
Recoil is from the law of conservation of momentum. Energy is a quality of work that can be measured. When discussing recoil and energy it tends to be more understandable if one thinks of them separately, like a real life experience. Recoil generally conveys an action with an equal and opposite reaction as a topic for discussion. Energy and that energy specific to recoiling firearms conveys "kick" as in what a shooter feels.In the firearms lexicon, the energy of a
recoiling firearm is called felt recoil, free recoil,
and recoil energy. This same energy from a projectile in motion is
called: muzzle energy, bullet energy, remaining energy, down range
energy, and impact energy.
In mathematics, the recoil and energy of a
recoiling firearm are different as well. The recoil of a firearm,
both large and small, is a function of the law conservation of
momentum and can be stated mathematically as mf·vf = mp·vp from
Newton's
third law. The equation describes the recoil of a firearm and
the user or gun-mount system in its entirety. The action of firing
includes the powder charge mass and projectile at any position
along the barrel. The equal sign (=) that represents the total
thermodynamic energy held within the powder charge. "mf·vf" found
on the left side of the equation represents the backwards motion of
the firearm or firearm system. "mp·vp" found on the right of the
equation represents the forward motion of the powder charge mass
and projectile moving down the barrel, before either has left the
barrel.
The energy of a recoiling firearm can be stated
mathematically as Et=.5·m·v² from Newton's
second law. This equation is known as the "classic statement"
and yields a measurement of force in joules (foot-pound force in non-SI
units). The calculated energy is the amount of work that can be
done by the recoiling firearm, firearm system, or a projectile
because of their motion. When looking at the classic statement
(Et=.5·m·v²): the "Et" in energy represents the translational
kinetic energy of a recoiling firearm, firearm system, or
projectile’s motion after it exits the barrel. The "m" in the
equation represents the mass of the firearm, firearm system, or
projectile. The "v²" in the equation represents the square of the
velocity for the firearm or firearm system in backwards motion and
the projectile’s forward motion after it exits the barrel.
The difference between these two equations and
events is that during recoil, m·v = m·v, a projectile has not left
the barrel. When calculating the energy of a recoiling firearm,
Et=.5·m·v², the projectile has exited the barrel. Again, recoil is
a principle of the law of conservation of momentum and the energy
of a recoiling firearm, firearm system, or projectile is a quality
of work that can be measured.
It can also be helpful to think of the energy of
a recoiling firearm or firearm system as a byproduct of work being
done to accelerate a projectile towards its target.
See physics
of firearms for a more detailed discussion.
Perception of recoil
For small arms, the way in which the shooter perceives the recoil, or kick, can have a significant impact on the shooter's experience and performance. For example, a gun that "kicks like a mule" is going to be approached with trepidation, and the shooter will anticipate the recoil and flinch in anticipation as the shot is released. This leads to the shooter jerking the trigger, rather than pulling it smoothly, and the jerking motion is almost certain to disturb the alignment of the gun and result in a miss.This perception of recoil is related to the
momentum associated with a particular gun. The total force of
recoil is associated with the momentum of a gun, the momentum being
the product of the mass of the gun times the reverse velocity of
the gun. A heavier gun, that is a gun with more mass, will manifest
the momentum by exhibiting a lessened acceleration, and, generally,
result in a lessened perception of recoil.
One of the common ways of describing the felt
recoil of a particular gun/cartridge combination is as "soft" or
"sharp" recoiling; soft recoil is recoil spread over a longer
period of time, that is at a lower acceleration, and sharp recoil
is spread over a shorter period of time, that is with a higher
acceleration. With the same gun and two loads with different bullet
masses but the same recoil force, the load firing the heavier
bullet will have the softer recoil, because the product of mass
times acceleration must remain constant, and if mass goes up then
acceleration must go down, to keep the product constant.
Keeping the above in mind, you can generally base
the relative recoil of firearms by factoring in a number of figures
such as bullet weight, powder charge, the weight of the actual
firearm etc. The following are base examples calculated through the
Handloads.com free online
calculator, and bullet and firearm data from respective reloading
manuals (of medium/common loads) and manufactur specs:
- In a Glock 22 frame,
using the empty weight of , the following was obtained:
- 9 mm Luger - Recoil Impulse of .78 ms- Recoil Velocity of - Recoil Energy,
- .357 Sig - Recoil Impulse of 1.06 ms- Recoil Velocity of - Recoil Energy,
- .40 S&W - Recoil Impulse of .88 ms- Recoil Velocity of - Recoil Energy,
- In a Smith and Wesson .44 Magnum with 7.5-inch barrel, with an
empty weight of , the following was obtained:
- .44 Remmington Magnum - Recoil Impulse of 1.91 ms- Recoil Velocity of - Recoil Energy of
- In a Smith and Wesson 460 7.5-inch barrel, with an empty weight
of , the following was obtained:
- .460 S&W Magnum - Recoil Impulse of 3.14 ms- Recoil Velocity of - Recoil Energy of
- In a Smith and Wesson 500 4.5-inch barrel, with an empty weight
of , the following was obtained:
- .500 S&W Magnum - Recoil Impulse of 3.76 ms- Recoil Velocity of - Recoil Energy of
Dealing with recoil in mounted guns
A recoil system absorbs momentum, for example, by the barrel moving backwards. Cannons and such weapons without a recoil system roll several meters backwards when fired.In a soft-recoil system, a gun's barrel is moved
forward prior to shooting. As the barrel is
forced backwards by the recoil force, the energy is reduced by friction, resulting in less of
an overall "kick". One of the early guns to use this was the
French
65 mm mle.1906; however, this method did not receive much
attention until the 1970s.
In a mounted gun, a down-recoil system is when
the barrel is forced down on a spring mechanism, and immediately
springs back up to its original position. This modern system, since
around 2003, can work so rapidly that it works with machine
guns.
Recoilless
rifles and
rocket launchers exhaust gas to the rear, balancing the recoil.
They are used often as light anti-tank
weapons.
Misconceptions about recoil
Hollywood depictions of firearm victims being thrown through several feet backards are inaccurate; if this were the case, the shooter would also be thrown backwards with equal force (see Newton's third law). Gunshot victims frequently do collapse when shot, which is usually due to psychological motives, a direct hit to the central nervous system, and/or massive blood loss (see Stopping Power), and is not the result of the momentum of the bullet pushing them over.Of course this does not apply if the victim is
hit by heavy weapons fire, such as aircraft cannon, where the
momentum effects can be significant. The recoil from such a weapon
is equally enormous, and requires it to be mounted on a weapons
platform. An example of the latter would be the Handheld
Minigun
shown in the film Predator.
For example, the gun shown in the movie is based on the prototype XM214
Microgun, a six barrel electric Gatling gun
which fires the 5.56
× 45 mm NATO cartridge at a rate of 4000 to 6,000 rounds per
minute. Each cartridge accelerates a bullet to about ; at a
moderate rate of fire of 4,000 rounds per minute, a one second
burst will accelerate of mass. Assuming a user, and for the XM214
and ammunition, that one second burst will result in the gun and
user being accelerated to .
See also
External links
References
- Arthur B. Alphin, Any Shot You Want, The A-Square Handloading and Rifle Manual, On Target Press, 1996.
- Edward F. Obert, Thermodynamics, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1948.
- Mc Graw-Hill encyclopedia of Science and Technology, volume ice-lev, 9th Edition, Mc Graw-Hill, 2002.
recoil in Danish: Rekyl
recoil in German: Rückstoß
recoil in Persian: لگد (جنگافزار)
recoil in French: Recul d'une arme à feu
recoil in Italian: Rinculo
recoil in Norwegian: Rekyl
recoil in Polish: Odrzut broni
recoil in Russian: Отдача
recoil in Finnish: Rekyyli
recoil in Swedish: Rekyl
recoil in Chinese: 後座力
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
about the bush, antagonism, antipathy, avoid, avoidance, backfire, backlash, backlashing, backwash, balk, bashfulness, beat around,
beg the question, blanch,
blench, blink, boggle, boggling, boomerang, bounce, bounce back, bound, bound back, cannon, cannon off, carom, clashing, clout, collision, comeback, compunction, conflict, confutation, contradiction, contraposition, contrariety, contrecoup, counter, counteraction, counterblast, counterblow, counterposition,
counterstroke,
counterworking,
crankiness, cringe, crotchetiness, demur, demurral, diffidence, disapprove of,
dissent, dodge, draw back, duck, equivocate, evade, evasion, exchange, fade, fall back, fallback, falter, faltering, fence, fight shy of, flinch, fly back, force, friction, funk, give-and-take, grimace, hang back, hang off,
have qualms, have repercussions, hedge, hem and haw, hesitance, hesitancy, hesitate, hesitation, hold off,
impact, impress, impression, imprint, interchange, interference, jib, kick, kick back, kickback, lash back, look
askance at, make bones about, mark, modesty, nonconformity, objection, opposition, opposure, oppugnance, oppugnancy, parry, pause, perverseness, print, protest, pull away, pull back,
pullback, pullout, pussyfoot, put off, quail, quake, qualm, qualm of conscience,
qualmishness,
reaction, rebound, rebuff, recalcitrance, recalcitrate, recalcitration, reciprocation, reel back,
reflex, renitency, repercuss, repercussion, reply, repugnance, repulse, resile, resilience, resistance, response, retaliation, retort, retreat, return, revolt, revolt at, ricochet, scruple, scrupulosity, scrupulousness, shake, sheer off, shift, shift off, show distaste
for, shrink, shrink back,
shrink from, shrinking, shudder, shudder at, shy, shy at, shy away, shy off,
shyness, sidestep, sidestepping, snap back,
spring, spring back,
squinch, start, start aside, start back,
step aside, stick, stick
at, stickle, stickling, strain, swerve, swimming upstream,
tremble, turn aside,
ward off, waver, weasel, weasel out, wince