it is the instantaneous velocity as a projectile leaves the barrel
Muzzle velocity is the velocity of a bullet as it leaves the firearm's barrel, while recoil velocity is the backward momentum that the firearm experiences when the bullet is fired. Muzzle velocity determines the bullet's speed and trajectory, while recoil velocity affects the shooter's ability to control the firearm during and after firing.
the muzzle velocity on the 40gn vmax is 2200fps
well velocity is much stronger than muscle velocity because air velocity is when wind speed catches up with the heaver object and slows it down and muscle velocity is how much weight you can carry there is your answer hope you understand your welcome - Jamie
Muzzle velocity is typically measured using a chronograph, which is a device that calculates the speed of a projectile as it leaves the muzzle of a firearm. The chronograph works by measuring the time it takes for the projectile to pass through two sensors a known distance apart, allowing for the calculation of the velocity.
The muzzle velocity of the FN 5.7x28mm cartridge is approximately 1,900 feet per second (580 meters per second) when fired from a standard length barrel.
Muzzle velocity is the velocity of a bullet as it leaves the firearm's barrel, while recoil velocity is the backward momentum that the firearm experiences when the bullet is fired. Muzzle velocity determines the bullet's speed and trajectory, while recoil velocity affects the shooter's ability to control the firearm during and after firing.
the muzzle velocity on the 40gn vmax is 2200fps
It depends entirely on the muzzle velocity of the weapon you are using. The higher the muzzle velocity the farther the projectile will travel.
@ 1000 fps
The L1A1 SLR used by the British military is in caliber 7.62 NATO, and has a muzzle velocity of about 2800 fps.
Muzzle velocity of the SS-109 cartridge is about 3100 feet per second.
The M4A1 version of the M16 rifle has a muzzle velocity of about 2900 feet per second, firing the 5.56mm cartridge.
muzzle velocity
300m/s
2860 fps
Muzzle velocity is a function of type and quantity of powder, as well as the mass of the projectile and the length of barrel. All of these factors being equal except the bullet sizes in the question, probably the 357 with the lesser mass would have the higher muzzle velocity.
Varies with barrel and cartridge, but the muzzle velocity is about 2600 feet per second.