Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register.
12/15/07 at 3:22am
News: Thanks for your patience while the forums were upgraded.


Pages: 1
Mean figure of merit. (Read 417 times)
DoubleD
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 24
Mean figure of merit.
11/17/05 at 2:16am
 
Looking at The Treatise of Ammunition  1887 under Martini ammo accuracy is defined as:  The mean figure of merit.
 
Can any one point me to a reference defining mean figure of merit?  
 
The figure given is 9".40
Back to top
 
 

DD
  IP Logged
dbm
Full Member



Long Range Muzzle
Loader -
www.lrml.org

Posts: 101
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #1 - 11/17/05 at 7:05am
 
I don't have a reference book to hand, but an article from a 1979 edition of Guns Review, when discussing the Enfield rifle has a definition.  
 
The mean point of impact of a 20 shot group fired from a bench rest was determined by calculating the average distance of the shots from any datum point. The mean distance of the 20 shots from the mean point of impact was the figure of merit.
 
David
Back to top
 
 

David Minshall
  IP Logged
DoubleD
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 24
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #2 - 11/17/05 at 4:39pm
 
Thanks Dave.
 
Let me see if I understand your explanation.
 
I have an aim point on my target and fire 20 rounds.  
 
I establish the coordinates of each round on an X and  Y coordinate.  The Average of each of these two coordinates give me the Mean point of impact.
 
Then I measure the distance of each shot from the Mean point of impact to get a mean distance.  This mean distance is the figure of merit.
 
Is that correct?
 
Back to top
 
 

DD
  IP Logged
dbm
Full Member



Long Range Muzzle
Loader -
www.lrml.org

Posts: 101
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #3 - 11/17/05 at 7:53pm
 
That's how understand it! I'm just having trouble finding a contemporary reference with a definitive explanation.
 
David
Back to top
 
 

David Minshall
  IP Logged
tjshooter
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 10
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #4 - 11/17/05 at 8:38pm
 
David
Try the Textbook of small arms 1929 Page 239 with the additional fact that group size is 3.5 times the figure of Merit page 67.
 
TJ.
Back to top
 
 
  IP Logged
303smle
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 2
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #5 - 11/19/05 at 3:11am
 
It appears, in the US at least, that the Mean Radius is not the same as Figure of Merit.  The following is from Hatcher�s Notebook, pages 412 and 413.
 
          Mean Radius is the average distance of all the shots from the center of the group.  It is usually about one third the group diameter.
     To obtain the mean radius of a shot group, measure the heights of all shots above an arbitrarily chosen horizontal line.  Average these measurements.  The result is the height of the center of group above the chosen line.  Then in the same way get the horizontal distance of the center from the vertical line, such as for instance, the left edge of the target.  These two measurements will locate the center of the group.
     Now measure the distance of each shot from this center.  The average of these measurements is the Mean Radius.  
 
     Figure of Merit.  A method adopted by the Ordnance Department in 1923 for evaluating very small groups.  It is obtained as follows:  Draw a vertical line through the lowest shot in the group, also through the shot furthest to the left. Add the distance from the bottom lines to the highest shot to that from the vertical line to the shot furthest to the right.  Divide by two.
 
I don't know whether the above Figure of Merit is the same as that used for the Mean Figure of Merit cited in the Treatise of Ammunition-1887.  It seems there should be some British reference material that covers this.
 
bob c
Back to top
 
 
  IP Logged
DoubleD
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 24
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #6 - 11/19/05 at 2:36pm
 
Bob C,
 
Our discussion last week on the way to the range made me  think more about this term  "figure of merit" and that I really did not know what it meant.  
 
Then this week my copy of The Treatise on Ammunition 1887 arrived and there was the term "mean figure of merit" as the standard for accurracy of Martini Henri ammo.  Now I definitely had to know what it meant.
 
The fellows here had the answer, but I wanted a definitive reference, just to be sure.  
 
Hatcher!!!! Why didn't I think  of that.  I had checked Mann and Greener but I couldn't find anything their work.  I don't know why I didn't think of General Hatcher, that is no brainer.  
 
This morning when I saw your post I went to my library and started looking.   You know all those pretty fancy  leather bound books I have been getting from The NRA Classics Firearm library,  well they turn out to be more than just pretty faces.  
 
Volume II of  Whelen's Small Arms and Design and Ballistics explains the process with illustrations.  And it is just as everyone here has described.
 
Thanks Gents.  
 
Bob, start loading ammo, lets go to the range next weekend.  I have to see if I can load better than 9"-40.  
 
Douglas
 
 
 
Back to top
 
 

DD
  IP Logged
DoubleD
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 24
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #7 - 12/03/05 at 11:14pm
 
Went shooting today and decide to apply the measurments to see what  I have. I was testing a Nitro for Black load using a MHCC with a Parker Hale tang mounted peep sight.
 
Here is the 50 yard 12 shot group I got.  Greatest spread ctc is easy, 4.825
 

 
Time for mean radius.
 
Quote from 303smle   on 11/19/05 at 3:11am:
It appears, in the US at least, that the Mean Radius is not the same as Figure of Merit. �The following is from Hatcher�s Notebook, pages 412 and 413.

� � � � � Mean Radius is the average distance of all the shots from the center of the group. �It is usually about one third the group diameter.
� � To obtain the mean radius of a shot group, measure the heights of all shots above an arbitrarily chosen horizontal line. �Average these measurements. �The result is the height of the center of group above the chosen line. �Then in the same way get the horizontal distance of the center from the vertical line, such as for instance, the left edge of the target. �These two measurements will locate the center of the group.
� � Now measure the distance of each shot from this center. �The average of these measurements is the Mean Radius.

 
This  is a bunch of work to calculate, but I finally came up with 1.8 inches mean radius.
 
Then following these instructions and then checking my own copy of Hatchers I tried to compute figure of merit.
 
Quote:
Figure of Merit. �A method adopted by the Ordnance Department in 1923 for evaluating very small groups. �It is obtained as follows: �Draw a vertical line through the lowest shot in the group, also through the shot furthest to the left. Add the distance from the bottom lines to the highest shot to that from the vertical line to the shot furthest to the right. �Divide by two.

 
 
I drew the verticle line through the lowest shot.
Then I drew a verticle line through the left shot.  
 
 
The next step doesn't make sense.  
Quote:
Add the distance from the bottom lines to the highest shot to that from the vertical line to the shot furthest to the right.

That's what is says in the book also.
 
What?
 
 
Back to top
 
 

DD
  IP Logged
303smle
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 2
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #8 - 12/04/05 at 5:39pm
 
What can I say?  Hatcher must have had a bad hair day when he wrote that definition as it is obviously flawed.  
 
I did a Google search on "figure of merit ammunition" and found at least six responses that resulted in a definition.  Although they are all worded somewhat differently, the one closest to Hatcher's description is:  To find it [figure of merit], draw a line through the center of the lowest shot in the group and then measure the vertical distance to the center of the highest shot in the group.  Do the same with the shot farthest to the left and measure to the farthest right shot.  Average these two measurements.  
 
It is interesting that Hatcher's Notebook was first published in 1947 and has been through at least three editions.  Mine is the third edition and you'd think someone would have noted the error by now.
 
bob c
Back to top
 
 
  IP Logged
DoubleD
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 24
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #9 - 12/04/05 at 6:22pm
 
Just like we thought.
 
Figure of Merit for the target is 5.11 we can do better.
Back to top
 
 

DD
  IP Logged
DoubleD
YaBB Newbies
*


I love YaBB 1G -
SP1!

Posts: 24
Re: Mean figure of merit.
Reply #10 - 12/06/05 at 1:49am
 
Found it in the Treatise of Ammunition 1887 Plate  XI.  
 
 Bob's description Quote:
To obtain the mean radius of a shot group, measure the heights of all shots above an arbitrarily chosen horizontal line. Average these measurements. The result is the height of the center of group above the chosen line. Then in the same way get the horizontal distance of the center from the vertical line, such as for instance, the left edge of the target. These two measurements will locate the center of the group.
Now measure the distance of each shot from this center. The average of these measurements is the Mean Radius.
 
 
 
The range  is 500 yards.
 
Back to top
 
 

DD
  IP Logged
Pages: 1