Point-blank range is the distance between a gun and a target of a given size such that the bullet in flight is expected to strike some point of the target without adjusting the elevation of the gun. The point blank range will vary with the gun used and the target chosen. A gun with a flatter trajectory will permit a greater point blank range for a given target size, and a larger target will allow for a longer point blank range for a given gun.
In Forensics, Point-blank range typically refers to extreme close range (i.e., target within 3 feet of the muzzle at moment of discharge), but not close enough to be an actual contact shot. Gunshot wounds from point-blank range typically display extensive powder burns, as well as tissue damage from perforation by unburned grains of smokeless gunpowder.
Point blank fire was fire at a target in which the gun did not need elevating. The target would lie either within point blank range, or slightly beyond it so that it would be hit by the first bound of the ball. It was felt that artillery was at its most effective against infantry or cavalry at this point as the unpredictably bouncing ball would be hard to avoid by a mass of troops. Different types of guns had different point blank ranges; for example point blank range was out to 342 yards (313 m) for a French 8 pound Gribeauval gun with a 2.25 pound (1.0 kg) gunpowder charge.
Fire at targets beyond point blank range was called direct fire, and would require the gun to be elevated.
In naval engagements, point-blank range was almost exclusively used from genesis of naval guns until the development of an effective self-propelled torpedo in the 1870s, even though the guns were actually capable of much greater ranges. Because a torpedo hit from a small vessel could sink even a large ship, the gun ranges anticipated for naval warfare opened out so that a ship would not be vulnerable to torpedo attack from its opponent. The range settled at around 6000 yards (5500 m) at the end of the 19th Century but during the First World War jumped to the limit of the range of the guns themselves, 15 miles (30 km) or more for larger calibres.
The need to measure and allow for the target's movement relative to the vessel carrying the gun led to much technical development in the period between about 1910 and the end of the Second World War. The most important one of these was the use of a separate organisation for aiming the guns, rather than the gunners themselves doing this using sights connected to the gun barrels. At the greater ranges the targets were no longer even visible to the gunners, crew in director towers or using radar now observing and correcting for the fall of shot. This in turn led on to further developments to perform the task in anti-aircraft fire where the ranges were nearly as great but the targets moved even more quickly.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Point-blank range".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world