Product Details
Understanding Firearm Ballistics

Understanding Firearm Ballistics
By Robert A. Rinker

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Product Description

The new greatly improved 6th Edition - Copyright 2005 - with better charts, easier math, better drawings, and improved readability. Understanding Firearm Ballistics explains the subject in understandable terms. The original text has been line edited, improved & expanded with up-to-date explanations and examples. The only complete reference book of extensive information with 432 pages of little known facts. A complete guide that is full of valuable data with illustrations, drawings, charts, tables, tips, glossary, index, and detailed factual information. Understanding Firearm Ballistics, 6th Edition, is a must for beginner or expert.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #32188 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-06-01
  • Released on: 2005-06-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 432 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Review
"An extremely useful tool." -- "Guns & Ammo" associate editor Phil Spangenberger

"One of the most useful firearms-related books published this century." -- "Handloader" associate editor Al Miller

"This book is top drawer. An important book." -- "The Varmint Hunter Magazine" editor in chief Ned Kalbfleish

...an extremely useful tool - not only to the professional gunner, but for the casual sport shooter as well. -- Guns & Ammo, Oct. 1995

...an extremely useful tool - not only to the professional gunner, but for the casual sport shooter as well. --Guns & Ammo, Oct. 1995

One of the most useful firearms-related books published this century -- Al Miller, Handloader, Aug. 1996

One of the most useful firearms-related books published this century --Al Miller, Handloader, Aug. 1996

Written in a clear and friendly style...this book guides the reader to a strong intermediate level of knowledge. -- The American Rifleman, NRA,, Oct. 2000

Written in a clear and friendly style...this book guides the reader to a strong intermediate level of knowledge. --The American Rifleman, NRA,, Oct. 2000

From the Publisher
Understanding Firearm Ballistics, by Robert A. Rinker, just received a new review that is very prestigious. The American Rifleman, the main publication of the National Rifle Association, printed a review that said a lot of nice things about the book on page 33 of the October 2000 issue. We already had a lot of great reviews by some of the best magazines that cover firearms, but this is great. The review was short but had nothing but nice things to say about our book. The American Rifleman only prints one or two reviews a month out of the thousands of books that are available, and we are proud to be mentioned in such a fine magazine. Buy a copy of the book and see why they like it so much.

About the Author
Mr. Rinker has a unique and diversified background that is perfectly suited to author a book on firearm ballistics. His love affair with firearms started at the age of six when his father, a military officer and newspaperman, taught him the manual of arms and gun safety. He started reading and studying about firearms and ballistics while still a youth. He has owned and fired most types of firearms, both antique and modern. He also acquired from his father a love for the printed word and has written and been published in national magazines, mostly on aviation, firearms, travel, history, and antiques. Mr. Rinker is a contributing editor to a national firearm magazine and he has written five books. His own photographs have accompanied many of his articles. Some intellectual readers want his writing to be more exact in grammatical technique, but he writes for the average reader in a style they can easily follow on even the most advanced subjects, and most readers appreciate that quality. While attending college, Mr. Rinker was employed as an armed police officer at a major airport. He also worked as a tool and die apprentice during the day while attending college at night. When his foreman found out about his knowledge of firearms, some of his early machine shop labor involved repair and restoration on antique guns from the supervisor's private collection. Educated as an industrial engineer, he owned and operated his own tool-die and machine shop where some of the work was on firearms, including big guns for the U. S. Navy. This work included design and research on modern shipboard weapons. He has also been trained and employed as an airline transport pilot, commercial-instrument-multi-engine aircraft pilot and gold seal flight instructor. He taught aeronautics in both the classroom and the air to Naval Aviators during the Vietnam War. He has degrees in both Industrial Engineering and Aviation Science. He is married and has adult children and grandchildren.


Customer Reviews

Another "Edition" or just another printing?3
Rinker's book is well organized and documented, but a difficult read because of sentence and paragraph structure, run-on sentences, poor use of commas, nonparallel construction, illogical and vague antecedents, wordiness, and contradictory statements. It also contains several, significant mathematical errors and incomplete descriptions, and it is occasionally condescending. In addition, the intended audience seems in flux. Such a definitive work in its 4th edition deserves better focus, editing and proofing.

Structurally, the book seems to attempt to provide sufficient information for the scientifically educated while remaining understandable for the reader with less than a high school education. It fails on both fronts; the technical information is lacking, and the narrative is often poorly written. "Clear only if known" was a frequent reaction while reading. MInor sections, such as self defense, could have been better presented, redundancies and cross references could be improved, and the savings of space could be used to improve both layout and presentation.

Regarding the dual audience, the narrative could be written for the less sophisticated with complete scientific formulae and explanations set off for the more astute reader. In addition, these sections could even be labeled as to the level of mathematics required for mastery.

Mr. Rinker needs an editor. My experience in engineering and in academia leads me to believe that Mr. Rinker, for whatever reasons, resists, or is denied, collaboration with a competent editor; the book, the author, and the audience deserve better.

Notes from my reading indicated over fifty errors, including at least 9 errors in logic, 7 mathematical errors, and 37 grammatical errors. I assume that these are only representative of what a closer reading would reveal.

I doubt that the book has ever been competently edited; it has simply been reprinted. With current printing technology, this is inexcuseable.

Even so, it is the best source I have found for a comprehensive treatment of firearm ballistics. It is unfortunate that the publisher is unwilling to do better.

Just what I wanted, but didn't expect to get5
So I'm reading an article in a shooting magazine that mentions that a twist of 1 in 8 would have been better for a particular bullet, and I refer to *this* book to find out why. The index takes me to exactly the right text where the author, seemingly telepathically, refers me to two chapters I should read first to get a full understanding of the information. This book not only has all the information I need, the information is structured so well that it makes an ideal at-hand reference as well as a progressive course if you want, and have the time, to read it straight through. And, the information is layered in terms of complexity so you (I anyway) can find the section I need and read until the benefit of continuing is outweighed by the difficulty of continuing. Just right. I wish I could write like this.

Bad presentation, Great information4
While not a prose stylist, the author packs an incredible wealth of information about all aspects of ballistics in one place. I found the book fascinating. It is the best thing out there for understanding firearms ballistics, and anyone interested in the complex science of ballistics must have a copy on the shelf. Having said that, the book is presented terribly. The typeface is hard to read (and for information this densely packed, an agreeable typeface is important). The charts and diagrams are simply terrible. They look hand-drawn, and badly at that. Also, the author spends too much time defending himself from a badly recieved (in some math quarters) earlier edition and only manages to make it sound too personal. On the plus side the author is very encouraging to those of us that are mathamatically challanged. all in all, I learned and understood an enormous amount of information from this book, and consider it a classic in the field. There is nothing else quite like it.