Accuracy reloading depends on many things including our ability to measure and weigh, etc. We have the ability to calibrate our micrometers, calipers, and scales. Most of us do not have the ability to measure chamber pressure.
Muzzle velocity is an important parameter and we have chronographs but we do not have the ability to calibrate our chronographs. To make maters worse chronographs are very sensitive to how we set them up and use them and we can get significant erroneous results from improper set up.
Bryan Litz made the best of the bad situation in his book on Applied Ballistics for Long Range Shooting but he did not have the capability of calibrating his chronographs.
My objective of this post is simply to make folks aware of the uncertainty of our ability to measure muzzle velocity. We depend on an instrument that we do not have the ability to calibrate. That is my point , no more no less.
Muzzle velocity is an important parameter and we have chronographs but we do not have the ability to calibrate our chronographs. To make maters worse chronographs are very sensitive to how we set them up and use them and we can get significant erroneous results from improper set up.
Bryan Litz made the best of the bad situation in his book on Applied Ballistics for Long Range Shooting but he did not have the capability of calibrating his chronographs.
My objective of this post is simply to make folks aware of the uncertainty of our ability to measure muzzle velocity. We depend on an instrument that we do not have the ability to calibrate. That is my point , no more no less.