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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Parabolic Drag
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<blockquote data-quote="dfanonymous" data-source="post: 2582064" data-attributes="member: 97050"><p>There is no parabolic drag. There's your oddly worded to some, patent PDR…which makes sense to me. Not to be confused with rotating bands like on a 155.</p><p></p><p>Then, there's parabolic drag polar as mentioned above which is a aircraft physics term, as it relates to models/in a vacuum expressed in mathematics and focused on lift (to over simplify it, for the purposes of this forum.)</p><p></p><p>They have nothing to do with each other.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dfanonymous, post: 2582064, member: 97050"] There is no parabolic drag. There’s your oddly worded to some, patent PDR…which makes sense to me. Not to be confused with rotating bands like on a 155. Then, there’s parabolic drag polar as mentioned above which is a aircraft physics term, as it relates to models/in a vacuum expressed in mathematics and focused on lift (to over simplify it, for the purposes of this forum.) They have nothing to do with each other. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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Parabolic Drag
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