A fixed numerical relationship between G1 BC and G7 BC is not accurate, G1 BC varies a lot with respect to the bullet velocity as it flies down the range, the G7 BC is almost stable after the mid-range,Using data in Litz book over a wide range of bullet calibers, designs, and weights there is a perfect correlation between G1 and G7 meaning the characterization is not different for the two methods. Of course the flight models are different with a
resulting impact on ballistics.
A fixed numerical relationship between G1 BC and G7 BC is not accurate, G1 BC varies a lot with respect to the bullet velocity as it flies down the range, the G7 BC is almost stable after the mid-range,
Using G7 BC drag model would predict the trajectory more accurately than the G1 BC model all the way down to 1.2 Mach
Bryan Litz
G1 vs. G7 Ballistic Coefficients — What You Need to Know « Daily Bulletin
The better, up-to-date ballistics programs let you select either G1 or G7 Ballistic Coefficient (BC) values when calculating a trajectory. The ballistic coefficient (BC) of a body is a measure of its ability to overcome air resistance in flight. You've probably seen that G7 values are...bulletin.accurateshooter.com
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G1 BC vs G7 BC vs Bullet-Specific Drag Models
“In the past 4-5 years we’ve made quantum leaps when it comes to predicting bullet trajectories.” –...precisionrifleblog.com
A fixed numerical relationship between G1 BC and G7 BC is not accurate, G1 BC varies a lot with respect to the bullet velocity as it flies down the range, the G7 BC is almost stable after the mid-range,I agree completely that the models provide different trajectories. But given a perfect correlation, how would G7 tell one anything different than G1? In other words if I know G1 I can calculate G7 so the two characterizations do not include any unique information vs each other.
A bullet's weight has already been figured into its BC (i.e. BC = (weight/7000)/(caliber*2 x i) where i= the form factor of the bullet). If you divide bullet BC by the weight of the bullet, which has already been factored into the BC calculation, you are simply looking at a multiple of 1/i for a specific caliber, because the caliber and 7000 values are both constants (i.e. BC/W = (1/7000)/(caliber*2 x i). I don't see how this is really any more useful for the average shooter than the original BC value. If you just want to look at the form factor, Berger provides this value for their bullets, or you can buy a copy of "Ballistic Performance of Rifle Bullets" by Bryan Litz, which contains form factor values for a fairly wide range of bullets from other manufacturers. Otherwise, how does dividing the BC by bullet weight, which is a fixed value and already part of the BC, really tell you anything more than the BC itself?
@davidjoe
As I understand it, the cross-sectional density is defined at bullet weight / cross sectional area of the bullet. The values should be readily available.
Per Bryan Litz, a higher BC would trump marginal MV gain.Ned Ludd observes and describes what we have all come to understand from the ballisticians. I have raised the OP's observations over the past number of years. I hope damoncali weighs in on this conversation. He always has great insight! It does not bother me so much for folks to tell us that bullet weight is calculated into the BC. I'm ok with that and the majority of the time at 5-600 yards light weight versus heavy weight bullets appear to come rather close on our calculations. However, I witnessed it on many occasions where a 6mm versus a 7 or 30 cal. in high wind conditions out to 600-1500 yards, the light bullet in a direct crosswind moves much more, when the ballistics showed them to be the same. Many very good competition shooters will tell you the same. A group of us literally tested these theories with different calibers out to 1400 yards a few years ago. I won't bore you with details.....heavies seem to rule in the wind. I'm not smart enough to know how to calculate or somehow incorporate this into our programs. I simply go shoot them and see what they do. For me the ballistics I run on paper give me a good idea.....thats it!
This is not a new debate, as you noted. I have also conducted tests using .223 Rem and .308 Win F-TR loads that were predicted [on the surface] to have similar external ballistics. In contrast to your observations, I have found that the [much] lighter .224" bullets behaved exactly as the external ballistics indicted they should based on their BC and velocity. So, there are clearly two different schools of thought on this, both largely based on anecdotal evidence. Unfortunately, the methodology required to draw a definitive conclusion is not as simple as having two shooters side-by-side with two different bullet weights fire at approximately the same time and see which bullet moves farther offline. There are a number of caveats involved that must be addressed, such as:Ned Ludd observes and describes what we have all come to understand from the ballisticians. I have raised the OP's observations over the past number of years. I hope damoncali weighs in on this conversation. He always has great insight! It does not bother me so much for folks to tell us that bullet weight is calculated into the BC. I'm ok with that and the majority of the time at 5-600 yards light weight versus heavy weight bullets appear to come rather close on our calculations. However, I witnessed it on many occasions where a 6mm versus a 7 or 30 cal. in high wind conditions out to 600-1500 yards, the light bullet in a direct crosswind moves much more, when the ballistics showed them to be the same. Many very good competition shooters will tell you the same. A group of us literally tested these theories with different calibers out to 1400 yards a few years ago. I won't bore you with details.....heavies seem to rule in the wind. I'm not smart enough to know how to calculate or somehow incorporate this into our programs. I simply go shoot them and see what they do. For me the ballistics I run on paper give me a good idea.....thats it!
Agree! You nailed it! However, at 71 yrs of age and shooting for some 57 years and conducting these tests with not 2 shooters, but 6-8 at a time with local F-class shooters under basically the same conditions at two different ranges should be enough to get the point across. This is not a single opinion.This is not a new debate, as you noted. I have also conducted tests using .223 Rem and .308 Win F-TR loads that were predicted [on the surface] to have similar external ballistics. In contrast to your observations, I have found that the [much] lighter .224" bullets behaved exactly as the external ballistics indicted they should based on their BC and velocity. So, there are clearly two different schools of thought on this, both largely based on anecdotal evidence. Unfortunately, the methodology required to draw a definitive conclusion is not as simple as having two shooters side-by-side with two different bullet weights fire at approximately the same time and see which bullet moves farther offline. There are a number of caveats involved that must be addressed, such as:
Were the external ballistics of the loads tested really predicted to be the same? This is not as simple as it seems because it involves using an accurate BC for the Lot # bullets fired, not just the box value. Other issues such as the actual gyroscopic stability coefficient for each bullet (i.e. the relative barrel twist rate used with each load) and the actual intrinsic precision of each separate load are also considerations.
My point is simply this - is there something missing from ballistic prediction algorithms that would factor in bullet weight in a way that is important, but not addressed in most current ballistic programs? Maybe. I am not sufficiently expert in the matter to say one way or another. However, the only evidence to support that notion seems to be largely anecdotal. Until such time as those more expert than I am provide definitive proof and update their ballistic algorithms, I will continue to have faith that the numbers produced by current versions are pretty reasonable, because that's what my experience has been. Anyone that has had a different experience will probably believe otherwise, and rightly so. Regardless of which camp someone falls in, I think the notion of using external ballistic predictions as a rough guide, then modifying one's conclusions based on personal experience is really the only way to go.
This may be due to the higher inertia of heavier bullets to movement by the wind ( effect on bullet acceleration by force of wind).Ned Ludd observes and describes what we have all come to understand from the ballisticians. I have raised the OP's observations over the past number of years. I hope damoncali weighs in on this conversation. He always has great insight! It does not bother me so much for folks to tell us that bullet weight is calculated into the BC. I'm ok with that and the majority of the time at 5-600 yards light weight versus heavy weight bullets appear to come rather close on our calculations. However, I witnessed it on many occasions where a 6mm versus a 7 or 30 cal. in high wind conditions out to 600-1500 yards, the light bullet in a direct crosswind moves much more, when the ballistics showed them to be the same. Many very good competition shooters will tell you the same. A group of us literally tested these theories with different calibers out to 1400 yards a few years ago. I won't bore you with details.....heavies seem to rule in the wind. I'm not smart enough to know how to calculate or somehow incorporate this into our programs. I simply go shoot them and see what they do. For me the ballistics I run on paper give me a good idea.....thats it!