Find these numbers and velocities interesting . Been running my Jugg load at 2655 - 2660 and getting nice groups and scores running from 196 to 200 consistently over the life of this barrel . Load is 43,4gr of VV N-150 with bullet set .005 off of touch . X-count has been a bit low , but it's the gusty , windy time of the year at Ben Avery , and everyone is getting lower X numbers . Any reason to push the Velocity up , other than burn up a barrel faster ?
As Monte noted, running the 2725-ish node will buy slightly better wind deflection, around 0.2 MOA less per 10 mph full value wind at 600 yd, and around 0.3 MOA less at 1000 yd. These are not
huge numbers, but they're not zero either.
Keep in mind that someone running Juggernauts is already giving up even greater wind deflection to someone using a bullet such as the 200.20X at ~2650 fps velocity. The difference in windage between those two bullets translates to around 0.5 MOA less for the 200.20X at 600 yd, and around 1.2 MOA less at 1000 yd. Those differences are starting to become what I would call huge. So someone using Juggernauts can shave a little off that difference running the higher node.
An additional question would be how the precision compares between the two nodes. I know a few F-TR shooters that are running Jugs at ~2660 fps, and their rifles are shooting ridiculously tight, just crazy good. I used to run the Juggernauts at 2725 fps and I felt like the precision was also excellent, but if it's a bit easier to get the Jugs dialed in tight at 2660 fps, it would obviously factor in to the equation.
At the end of the day, each individual has to decide whether running the higher node would provide the same precision and be worth the effort. Gaining 0.2 MOA or 0.3 MOA less wind deflection at 600 yd or 1000 yd, respectively, isn't much, especially when we consider that the
effective gain is probably even much less than that. If someone can reliably make wind calls to 3 mph, for example, then the difference in wind deflection between the low and high nodes would only be about one third the amount predicted for a full value 10 mph wind. I don't believe there are many F-TR shooters that can
reliably shoot a difference in windage between two loads of less than 0.1 MOA at 600 yd. Nonetheless, the faster node might be worth a point just outside the 10-ring from time to time, statistically. These days, matches are often won/lost by a point or an X difference in score. So one cannot really say running the higher node would be of no value whatsoever. It just wouldn't be an in-your-face difference that was easily quantifed over the short haul.