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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
BC Article- Link
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<blockquote data-quote="darrindlh" data-source="post: 360238" data-attributes="member: 17383"><p>I am by no means taking sides in the debate at all just adding my 2 cents. I would have to agree with Jon on external ballistics. For us to even come close shooting at various ranges we have to trust our ballistic calculator. It is true that actual feild data may and I say may be different than what we get on the computer. But we need a starting point. B.c's are very much important to a LRH. We can not rely on a factor hoping our barrel will make the bullet that we are using yaw better so that we can shot flatter. These barrel are not the norm and can not be relied on. A bullet with a higher b.c will in fact shot flatter and have less wind drift at extended ranges that we can predict and varify with feild data. Just my .02</p><p> </p><p>Darrin</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="darrindlh, post: 360238, member: 17383"] I am by no means taking sides in the debate at all just adding my 2 cents. I would have to agree with Jon on external ballistics. For us to even come close shooting at various ranges we have to trust our ballistic calculator. It is true that actual feild data may and I say may be different than what we get on the computer. But we need a starting point. B.c's are very much important to a LRH. We can not rely on a factor hoping our barrel will make the bullet that we are using yaw better so that we can shot flatter. These barrel are not the norm and can not be relied on. A bullet with a higher b.c will in fact shot flatter and have less wind drift at extended ranges that we can predict and varify with feild data. Just my .02 Darrin [/QUOTE]
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