The conclusion on that paper is wrong and if you divide the example I put in 3 zones you will find out that the 2nd and 3rd zones have a greatest effect
on the wind than the first one. I divided in two zones for simplicity and knowing this is a subject for confusion sometimes.
In the example I posted above with 2 zones you can clearly see the bullet takes more time to travel the same distance due to the lower speeds / deceleration.
This are the physics on paper. Physics are supported by the math and the math I am showing demonstrates what I have been saying.
55" - 34.2" = 20.8" DIFFERENCE. The initial chart was done with my own ballistics calculations that I created in excel but if you put these zones in any ballistics calculator you will see the same or almost similar cards depending on BC adjustments and what not but the overall result is the same. An object travelling slower takes more time to cover the same distance than traveling faster. I know you know this.
Here give it a try if you want... hornady's one will do... http://www.hornady.com/ballistics-re...ics-calculator
Let me give you another example. Lets say you read a 20mph 3 o'clock wind during the first 500 yards. Then in the last 500 yards you read a 20mph wind
going 9 o'clock. How would you adjust? Would you say they cancel each other out or something else?
I wished more people participated on this thread so we could get other points of views, explanations or questions.
We will get there! lol.
on the wind than the first one. I divided in two zones for simplicity and knowing this is a subject for confusion sometimes.
In the example I posted above with 2 zones you can clearly see the bullet takes more time to travel the same distance due to the lower speeds / deceleration.
This are the physics on paper. Physics are supported by the math and the math I am showing demonstrates what I have been saying.
55" - 34.2" = 20.8" DIFFERENCE. The initial chart was done with my own ballistics calculations that I created in excel but if you put these zones in any ballistics calculator you will see the same or almost similar cards depending on BC adjustments and what not but the overall result is the same. An object travelling slower takes more time to cover the same distance than traveling faster. I know you know this.
Here give it a try if you want... hornady's one will do... http://www.hornady.com/ballistics-re...ics-calculator
Let me give you another example. Lets say you read a 20mph 3 o'clock wind during the first 500 yards. Then in the last 500 yards you read a 20mph wind
going 9 o'clock. How would you adjust? Would you say they cancel each other out or something else?
I wished more people participated on this thread so we could get other points of views, explanations or questions.
We will get there! lol.
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