I fully believe and understand the results you guys say you see at the range.
Me too.
Peace.
I fully believe and understand the results you guys say you see at the range.
This is what I've been saying. And it only happens when zero range is beyond test distance(which is not normal for ladder testing).Tsingleton said:take a ballistic calculator set it for 300yd zero 300 yd range select the OP data enter the different velocities then look at the chart as it passes the 100 yd range you will see the flatter bullet path resulting in the faster bullets printing lower at 100
We may be in agreement about one theory, but it is still possible that his barrel is whipping shots for the range of charges, and I'm sure that 100yds is too close for ladder testing.Tsingleton said:I think we are all in agreement now for the OP as to why his ladder test went down as he went up in charge
I don't think im the only stubborn one here. That's ok tho
mikecr said:Thanks LRGoodger
I'll concede to your reasoning, and declare that I was wrong.
Guess I worked around common sense with ballistic software...
Bad move,, Good lesson
Folks, I'm sorry for my contribution to any misunderstanding of this.
OleFreak said:Howdy
Setting “zero†for all to 300 yards then running shooterscalculator at the different velocities clearly indicates that at 100 yards the faster projectile will impact lower.
But will a 24†Savage factory heavy “whip†enough to alone account for the rest of all that vertical at 100 yds?
OleFreak said:I got that early on watching this unfold yesterday and care nothing of what constitutes a proper ladder.
I’m only curious if the muzzle of a barrel the size of a Savage varmint will actually deflect enuf to cause all that vertical spread at 100 yards over what’s already accounted for by the differing velocities.