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doclu60 is an experience RFBR shooter. what he is saying is that if a .157 gain is not chased, you will not do very well in RFBR. to shoot at the National level your rifle better average under 0.200 for minimum of 5 consecutive 5-shot groups, minimum that is and you may finish middle of the pack.Another newbe for the ignore list....
At no point was I saying .157" should not be chased. I was pointing out that its not as if you gain the full difference just by switching to 980fps ammo. You'll still have to read wind 95-98% as good as you did before, just to shoot as good as you did before. ... and I'm not saying THAT shouldn't be chased either. If we could get 980fps ammo, as suggested, then we could pick it up and it would be nice. However, it isn't as if someone is going to automatically see a .157" reduction in horizontal spread by switching to 980fps ammo. The enhanced flight path will certainly help, but it likely isn't going to be to the tune of .157" in actual shooting.
It has been known for many years that slower ammo (rimfire ammo) is less affected by the wind, so top shooters have always tried pistol ammo to see if there was a good batch that was accurate in their rifle.
It might sound counter-intuitive that slower ammo is less affected by the wind, but that is because the bullet drag goes as the square of the velocity (in the sub-sonic velocity region). So the higher the velocity, the greater the drag and so the more the wind will affect the bullet. It is possible to calculate an optimum muzzle velocity to minimise wind deflection and from memory it is about 980 ft/sec for 50 metres ranges.
Geoffrey, iirc McCoy claimed 950 fps based on 50 yds. Could have been the same Mach # as your finding, if atmospherics matched up. As to the imbalance of powder/primer vis a vis accuracy, has anyone tried sufficient bbl length to slow the usual target ammo in the 1060 fps range down to 980 ? SeymourIt has been known for many years that slower ammo (rimfire ammo) is less affected by the wind, so top shooters have always tried pistol ammo to see if there was a good batch that was accurate in their rifle.
It might sound counter-intuitive that slower ammo is less affected by the wind, but that is because the bullet drag goes as the square of the velocity (in the sub-sonic velocity region). So the higher the velocity, the greater the drag and so the more the wind will affect the bullet. It is possible to calculate an optimum muzzle velocity to minimise wind deflection and from memory it is about 980 ft/sec for 50 metres ranges.
orkan,
I was not referencing anything you may or may not have said. and I understand what you are saying here.
what I think is getting lost, is the fact in RFBR even a gain of 0.100 or less by a simple switch to a known lot that shoots well in the wind regardless of it being 980-1000 or whatever a RFBR shooter will do so if they want to compete at the level doclu60 is competing at.
for me I don' get wrapped up on the numbers, I just lot test and shoot what works best at the time. I have never chrono any rim-rife ammo as IMO it is a waste of time, as you still have to test it. I know Lapua doesn't even show the velocity on the test reports.
Lee
Alright, I will bite.
Is the 1080fps vs 980fps GAIN of wind drift (BC) attributed to a SLOWER projectile a real thing and if so can somebody explain why? Also if there is a GAIN in wind drift (BC) at 980fps then there must also be a gained vertical BC to match it. What's the phenomena that is happening here to create such an instance?
I am delving into the 22LR game now and have never heard of this concept. Can't wrap my head around it due to time of flight and both being under the speed of sound considering both bullets to be identical in form. If some of you are shooting RFBR then I would expect you to be knowledgeable and the concept to be correct or else I am not reading it correctly.
Thanks for any input.
That aspect of one lot doing well in the wind and the next lot not, makes me nuts.
Me three now y’all are gonna make me start banging my head against the wall..Me too!