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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Heavy Bullets!
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<blockquote data-quote="Long Time Long Ranger" data-source="post: 667192" data-attributes="member: 505"><p>On a ballistics computer enter data for two bullets with identical ballistic coefficients. One bullet at 150 grains and the other at 300 grains weight. With weight being the only change in the data. See what the results are. The two will probably be identical no matter the weight entered.</p><p> </p><p>I don't think I forgot any important factors in the equation. The same bc should fly the same. The key is finding the best velocity/BC combination with adequate weight/construction to do the job. A heavier bullet will not drift less just because it is heavier.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Long Time Long Ranger, post: 667192, member: 505"] On a ballistics computer enter data for two bullets with identical ballistic coefficients. One bullet at 150 grains and the other at 300 grains weight. With weight being the only change in the data. See what the results are. The two will probably be identical no matter the weight entered. I don't think I forgot any important factors in the equation. The same bc should fly the same. The key is finding the best velocity/BC combination with adequate weight/construction to do the job. A heavier bullet will not drift less just because it is heavier. [/QUOTE]
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