I'd be more concerned about your fluid units. cc means cubic centimeters; you just fired a 20mm^3 projectile. Not a criticism, just be careful of the recoil. XD
2000 cubic millimeters, BTW. How "long" is a 9mm bullet? The cross section is already 63.6mm^2. If it was a sphere that is 382mm^3. Okay my dosage might be a bit high.
is it a factor of 1000? 1cm = 10mm; 1cm^3 = 10mm x 10mm x 10mm? I hate cubic conversions.
I think standard 9mm bullets refer to the diameter of the projectile, but I've no idea of length- best technical drawing I could find stated ~16mm. Either way, a 2cm x 2cm x 2cm projectile should be larger than your average handgun calibre.
Lead surgery
> Nurse, give him 2ccs of lead, stat.
> How "stat", doctor?
> 1000 feet per second should do it.
(I have no idea the speed of a bullet)
I'd be more concerned about your fluid units. cc means cubic centimeters; you just fired a 20mm^3 projectile. Not a criticism, just be careful of the recoil. XD
2000 cubic millimeters, BTW. How "long" is a 9mm bullet? The cross section is already 63.6mm^2. If it was a sphere that is 382mm^3. Okay my dosage might be a bit high.
is it a factor of 1000? 1cm = 10mm; 1cm^3 = 10mm x 10mm x 10mm? I hate cubic conversions.
I think standard 9mm bullets refer to the diameter of the projectile, but I've no idea of length- best technical drawing I could find stated ~16mm. Either way, a 2cm x 2cm x 2cm projectile should be larger than your average handgun calibre.