....... snip.........The deflection from wind at 1400 fps is much greater than it would be at 900 fps. It is because the drag increases greatly in the transonic zone and that increases the lag time of the bullet, which is the major component of wind deflection. It is counter intuitive, .............. snip...........
This statement is indeed counter intuitive. I know almost nothing about this part of the sport and I've given it zero thought......... until now. I'm not a ballistics engineer, but know a little bit about physics and I shoot F/TR and BR matches using what you might call conventional equipment. As a result, I've got several ballistics calculators handy and I use them from time-to-time.
I found specifications for .458 caliber bullet weighing 500 grains with a B.C. of .300 for comparison. Then I plugged in some numbers appropriate for slow, large, heavy bullets.
Using a 90 degree crosswind and eliminating any spin drift calculation, a muzzle velocity of 900 fps results in a wind deflection at 500 yards of 30.7", a velocity of 714 fps at the target, and a flight time of 1.882 seconds. That doesn't strike me as surprising or unreasonable.
At a MV of 1400 fps, the wind deflection is predicted to be 45.8" (more), velocity 898 fps (higher), and the flight time is 1.401 seconds (shorter time). This does surprise me.
It is difficult for me to imagine how a bullet starting out one and a half times faster will take longer to get to the target. Sure enough, it doesn't. The faster bullet has, as most people would guess, a shorter flight time. So that part of your explanation doesn't match with my ballistics program.
However, as you correctly say, the windage is significantly more with the faster MV. In that respect, your statement and the ballistics program agree; but why?
I, for one, would think that a faster bullet with a shorter flight time should result in a smaller windage correction than that required for a slow bullet. To my surprise, the calculated windage is essentially 50% more for the faster round. That doesn't make sense for a bullet with half again as much MV, at least it doesn't make sense to me.
How fast should I launch this big chunk of lead to match the 10mph full wind deflection for a round producing a 900 fps muzzle velocity at 500 yards? According to the calculator I used, the answer is 2765 fps, pretty darned fast. At 500 yds the velocity is 1467 and the flight time is .747 seconds, only 40% of the time the slower bullet takes. Yet the wind deflection at 900 fps and 2765 fps is identical
How can that be? I admit to knowing nearly nothing about large caliber slow bullets, but if someone zeroed his rifle for a 10 mph cross wind using a 900 fps load and then said to me. "Watch me hit the X with this 2765 fps load without changing my scope, I would laugh.
I'm still on my first cup of morning coffee as I type this; consequently, I could have completely botched up the calculated data, but I don't think so. Can someone explain these non intuitive numbers?
I'm aware that as a well-supersonic bullet slows through the transoceanic range, drag gradually increases and then rapidly drops when the bullet goes sub-sonic. But that fact is not an explanation for these examples. Comments?