And mapper, when I rest up and get sober,i'd like to continue this conversation.
And mapper, when I rest up and get sober,i'd like to continue this conversation.
"Only the dead have seen the end of war" -Plato
Found this...about diffrent models..
http://www.sportingshootermag.com.au...c-coefficients
http://www.frfrogspad.com/extbal.htm
Sounds good.....pause button engaged.
Last edited by mapper; December 30th, 2014 at 01:00 AM.
Because im thinking you know a lot more than I do about this subject.
"Only the dead have seen the end of war" -Plato
Charles... I think you're making this more difficult than necessary... just start with either G1 or G7 at the muzzle and do the field work to fine tune.
Regardless of whether your initial chart is derived from using G1 or G7 BC's... you STILL will need to verify the end data AT THE RANGE. I've used G1 data for YEARS and in the past couple, G7... both are adequate to get close... and both require in the field data verification and fine tuning.
This thread reminds me of the debate years ago between a guy on Sniper's Hide and Brian Litz... lots of back and forth if I recall.
The best way to build a drop chart is to START at a given point... shoot to verify and fine tune, and then discover what YOUR rifle does with YOUR loads.
I don't have the data handy and can't find it... but I've seen charts developed with G1 data and G7 data and neither was significantly more precise than the other. It's the IN THE FIELD shooting and verification that matters in the end.
Signal-0 Productions Firearms Training... for the working man.
Bob,
I agree... it wasn't untill I saw the chart in the 2nd link I posted that showed the diffrences between them was not much..they both agreed with each other from 0- 600 yds then were within reason of each other further out..
I just never saw that before... so yes the diffrences are there, but not enough to be concerned with, as field data rules. And either one will get close enough.
One good thing about the shoot in April, is we will have the ability to get out past 500... the only problem is I'd like to shoot 10 rounds at 600, 700, 800, 90 and 1K and then go to the target and actually measure what's going on. A hit at those distances is simply "a hit"... unless you see where on the target the bullet struck, which is hard after the first 20 minutes of open range, you have little idea if it was a solid COM hit or a barely on the target hit... to me that's MOST IMPORTANT.
Signal-0 Productions Firearms Training... for the working man.
Not to discredit anyone in this thread, because I have learned from reading it, but TRex has some great videos about this very subject on his YouTube channel.
Signal-0 Productions Firearms Training... for the working man.