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Stability and Spin Drift

Not according to equation 6.1 of "Applied Ballistics for Long Range Shooting" which predicts more stable bullets to have greater spin drift.

I had to pull out the book to look up the referenced equation.

Drift = 1.25(Sg + 1.2)tof^1.83

Berger.fan is correct if we assume the equation holds.

Thank you for that Berger.fan
 
Spin drift is proportional to, well, spin. Faster twist = more drift.

If you want to be technically precise about it, it's not directly related to stability. But Bryan's equation is a good rule of thumb approximation - a curve fit to empirical data. The alternative requires hard to get information on bullet aerodynamics, so that's a pretty good way to go about it.
 
If it is gyroscopically stabilized. It is going to drift. You can minimize the drift by getting as close to an SG of 1.0 as possible. But you lose about 3% +/- BC for every 0.1 below an SG of 1.5. Below 1.0% you run a good chance of tumbling them. The higher the SG the more drift.
 

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