I really like that term "cone of dispersion". I think it can help people understand what happens at longer distances with various bullet's. It seems to me that generally, lower BC bullets have a larger cone if dispersion than higher BC bullet's. Therefore, to shoot well at long range, lower BC bullets must shoot smaller short range groups that higher BC bullets.
It is a good term, although most oscillatory modes of a barrel aren't round. So the "cone" you observe with a lot of rounds in a single group is rarely round. It's usually oblong in some way.
I think if you asked the BR guys you'd find that low BC bullets often have a LOWER "cone of dispersion" because they are so much less jump sensitive. That's why the short range BR folks run low BC bullets with slow twists.
Thus, it's a shift from mechanical accuracy at short range to robustness to wind at long range. At short range with short times of flight, the wind is less important than jump sensitivity and mechanical accuracy. And that's reversed at long range where BC and wind resistance become dominant.









800 yards