RegionRat
Gold $$ Contributor
Not sure how we got from trying to help folks understand the difference between sample-based values versus population-based values for SD, and now we are veering off the tracks with the statements about ES not being useful.
Folks the ES is just as important as the other stats and taking your eyes off of it in favor of the SD is just as wrong as not understanding the value of the SD or average.
The advice I am giving you is to watch both the SD and ES together and relate them to the average for balance and proportion.
To put it very simply, without doing complex stats to determine if you are in trouble isn't very hard.
To know if you are seeing warning signs in your AVG, SD, and ES, trust your eyes, these things should be balanced and proportioned.
Mother Nature is cruel most of the time, but sometimes she helps us too.
When she gives us a balance and symmetry, then we can see quickly if samples are out of balance or off center, just by eyeball.
If your ES doesn't sit balanced on your average, you might be in trouble.
If your SD and ES are not proportioned in terms of the ES being 4X to 6X times the SD, then you might be in trouble.
That is a very simple multiplication, and you only need to give it a rough look to know when something is wrong. A skinny test can mean the SDx4 = ES, and well populated test and the value approaches SDx6=ES.
It really isn't a guarantee you are locked in golden when your SD is 4X to 6X your ES, but the other way around is known to be trouble in that the ES is telling you something is wrong or you are under-sampled, or both.
A tight gun/load may take less than 15 samples to show you a decent stable SD, and a loose one takes 30 or more.
Here is an example. Suppose your average is 3000 and your ES is 60 and your SD is 10. The idea is your high and low values should sit roughly at 2970 and 3030. Your SDx6 = 60 Things are in balance and proportion so far.
But if your average is 3000 and your SD is 10 but your ES is only 20, something is wrong and you are probably under-sampled. The next time you shoot, you will see something change almost guaranteed.
The ES tells you plenty. If your average isn't centered, or if your SD isn't proportional, something is wrong.
Don't ignore the ES, it is just as important as the average and the SD. Carry On.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!
Folks the ES is just as important as the other stats and taking your eyes off of it in favor of the SD is just as wrong as not understanding the value of the SD or average.
The advice I am giving you is to watch both the SD and ES together and relate them to the average for balance and proportion.
To put it very simply, without doing complex stats to determine if you are in trouble isn't very hard.
To know if you are seeing warning signs in your AVG, SD, and ES, trust your eyes, these things should be balanced and proportioned.
Mother Nature is cruel most of the time, but sometimes she helps us too.
When she gives us a balance and symmetry, then we can see quickly if samples are out of balance or off center, just by eyeball.
If your ES doesn't sit balanced on your average, you might be in trouble.
If your SD and ES are not proportioned in terms of the ES being 4X to 6X times the SD, then you might be in trouble.
That is a very simple multiplication, and you only need to give it a rough look to know when something is wrong. A skinny test can mean the SDx4 = ES, and well populated test and the value approaches SDx6=ES.
It really isn't a guarantee you are locked in golden when your SD is 4X to 6X your ES, but the other way around is known to be trouble in that the ES is telling you something is wrong or you are under-sampled, or both.
A tight gun/load may take less than 15 samples to show you a decent stable SD, and a loose one takes 30 or more.
Here is an example. Suppose your average is 3000 and your ES is 60 and your SD is 10. The idea is your high and low values should sit roughly at 2970 and 3030. Your SDx6 = 60 Things are in balance and proportion so far.
But if your average is 3000 and your SD is 10 but your ES is only 20, something is wrong and you are probably under-sampled. The next time you shoot, you will see something change almost guaranteed.
The ES tells you plenty. If your average isn't centered, or if your SD isn't proportional, something is wrong.
Don't ignore the ES, it is just as important as the average and the SD. Carry On.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!