I have been told for years the peak pressure with smokless powder in a shotgun is reached about 14" ahead of the standing breach. Does anyone have information to refute this?
This is simply an old wifes tale that has been told for yrs. At least as early as the late 1920's DuPont ran a chart of 5 powders black, bulk smokeless & 3 dense smokeless powders from fast to the newly developed progressive (slow) which allowed them to load the heavy, High-Velocity loads we call Express, Super X, Hi-Power etc. "ALL" of these loads reached peak pressures within the chamber, from about 1-1½ inches from breech. Breech pressure has for yrs always been measured at the 1" point to ensure it didn't "Miss the Peak" as might happen if taken further away. One very good indicator of the max pressure occuring near the breech can be seen co-incidently from the gun-makers themselves. When smokeless powders began to replace Black, they didn't "Beef Up" the forward sections of their bbls, they "Beefed" up the breeches.
Note that in the DuPont test, of which I only have the data for 4 of the powders, all were loaded to the same balistics using 1¼oz of shot & a 3 dram or eqivelent powder charge. Al peaked within 8800-9800 psi from 1-1½", swapped positions @ 2½-2 3/4" had their max varition @ 4" of from 6000-7500psi & by 10" from breech were all back within 3400-3800psi. At every point past the chamber though the ones with highest max pressures now had the lowest, & vice-versa. Black had the 2nd lowest chamber & 2nd highest bbl pressure & 3FG was used, had 2FG, (often recommended for shotguns) been used it would have been closer to the slowest, most progressive smokeless used.
I noted the "Pressure chart" shown on that thread had no dimensions, no load identification & didn't even state what type of gun was being tested. Totally Useless "Non-Info".
This gun in question "Did Not" burst because the max pressure was too high, if it had, it would have a burst chamber just as did the Parkers Bell blew up @ about 30K pressure.