Tell me something about wind? Specifically, do you account for "drift velocity" or not? When a bullet is in the wind, it's getting pushed laterally, but when it exits the wind, even tho it's not getting pushed anymore, it still has some lateral "drift velocity" right?
Most of my shooting is done either no wind, or in pretty constant wind areas, but I have a question about wind calls based on "drift velocity"... I have 2 examples from my own hunting experience of shots that I passed on because I couldn't make up my mind about the wind...
For example, a 600yrd shot with a .300WSM 150grn on a whitetail doe. 400yrds of open flight with a full value wind left to right 15mps, but then enters a valley with zero wind (slight standing swirl at the mouth, but gentle). I figured the hold over at 16" for 400yrds. (400yrds/100*15mph)/15= 4MOA=16" at 400. My question is, where does the bullet go next? I'm estimated at 400yrds, the bullet had about 8" per 100yrds lateral drift velocity... So over the next 200yrds, I estimated another 16" of drift, total of 32"... But some of my buddies say I shouldn't account for "drift velocity", so the adjustment should have been just 16" instead of 32".... Not wanting to potentially miss by 16", I passed on the shot...
My next example, I spotted a coyote across the "tip" of a horseshoe valley from one side to the other with a "valley wind" flowing like a river through it 10mph gusting to 15-20mph. 350yrds across one leg, then 70yrds across the "peninsula",and another 325yrds across the other leg. Total shot was 745yrds. 0-350 under full value 10mph right to left, 70yrds no value (in my face), then 325yrds of full value 10mph left to right. Accounting for the winds individually, I'd expect 8" drift to the left from the first wind, then 8" back to the right in the 2nd wind. Ignoring drift velocity, since the bullet velocity is slightly lower in the 2nd section, I would push slightly to the left of zero. However, if I account for drift velocity, I would expect an additional 1.5" of left drift in the 70yrd "no value" section. So I would expect 9.5" of left (0-350 + 350-420yrds), and 8.25" of right drift (420-745), so I would adjust 1.25" right. The coyote was moving through pretty quickly, so by the time I decided it was only 1.25" diff between both methods, he was gone.
So what's the verdict? Do you account for the lateral velocity across NON-wind areas or not? (essentially do you assume the bullet lines back out once it exits the wind, or do you expect it to keep drifting laterally?)
Most of my shooting is done either no wind, or in pretty constant wind areas, but I have a question about wind calls based on "drift velocity"... I have 2 examples from my own hunting experience of shots that I passed on because I couldn't make up my mind about the wind...
For example, a 600yrd shot with a .300WSM 150grn on a whitetail doe. 400yrds of open flight with a full value wind left to right 15mps, but then enters a valley with zero wind (slight standing swirl at the mouth, but gentle). I figured the hold over at 16" for 400yrds. (400yrds/100*15mph)/15= 4MOA=16" at 400. My question is, where does the bullet go next? I'm estimated at 400yrds, the bullet had about 8" per 100yrds lateral drift velocity... So over the next 200yrds, I estimated another 16" of drift, total of 32"... But some of my buddies say I shouldn't account for "drift velocity", so the adjustment should have been just 16" instead of 32".... Not wanting to potentially miss by 16", I passed on the shot...
My next example, I spotted a coyote across the "tip" of a horseshoe valley from one side to the other with a "valley wind" flowing like a river through it 10mph gusting to 15-20mph. 350yrds across one leg, then 70yrds across the "peninsula",and another 325yrds across the other leg. Total shot was 745yrds. 0-350 under full value 10mph right to left, 70yrds no value (in my face), then 325yrds of full value 10mph left to right. Accounting for the winds individually, I'd expect 8" drift to the left from the first wind, then 8" back to the right in the 2nd wind. Ignoring drift velocity, since the bullet velocity is slightly lower in the 2nd section, I would push slightly to the left of zero. However, if I account for drift velocity, I would expect an additional 1.5" of left drift in the 70yrd "no value" section. So I would expect 9.5" of left (0-350 + 350-420yrds), and 8.25" of right drift (420-745), so I would adjust 1.25" right. The coyote was moving through pretty quickly, so by the time I decided it was only 1.25" diff between both methods, he was gone.
So what's the verdict? Do you account for the lateral velocity across NON-wind areas or not? (essentially do you assume the bullet lines back out once it exits the wind, or do you expect it to keep drifting laterally?)