BECAUSE OF THE WAY IT WAS DONE!boyntonstu wrote:Supersonic results.
Not too shabby.
I said CAN, not WILL - please, read what I've said. The way they did it, although slightly harder, is the only appropriate (but still not ideal) way to do supersonic sound-chronying. Your suggested method would not be appropriate.
The other reason I say they're inappropriate is that a sonic crack is just more garbage on the sound recording to wade through.
Also, that bullet is supersonic under the scientific definition, so there's less drag issues.
Most of the time when most people here (including me) say supersonic, they don't actually mean it. They mean "exceeding Mach 1", compared to the definition of supersonic as "all airflow over the object is in excess of the SOS".
Generally, to be supersonic, you need to be closer to Mach ~1.2.
With most projectiles, when people say they got them "supersonic" they're actually transonic, a horrible, horrible region for drag, where some airflow is subsonic, some supersonic, and a greater fraction of velocity is lost over much shorter distances, even compared to the considerable drag of supersonic flight.
Although simple, there are many cases where sound-chronies are simply not appropriate. Most of our near Mach 1 needs are amongst those.