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Hunting
Extreme Long Range Hunting & Shooting (ELR)
How High do bullets go in their flight trajectory
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<blockquote data-quote="Mram10us" data-source="post: 1823765" data-attributes="member: 111667"><p>I disagree that both are right and wrong. Is it close, yes, but it isn't the same. I think you'd have to take into account the entire column of compressed air from both bullets, Then add in ground effect. What about p-factor/spin drift, etc. Like you said, it would be impossible to test this.</p><p></p><p>On a deployment we all argued this because we had a college kid that had just taken physics and wanted to argue all sorts of stuff. AirDrop shows physics 101 n</p><p>leaves a lot to be desired outside of a vacuum.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mram10us, post: 1823765, member: 111667"] I disagree that both are right and wrong. Is it close, yes, but it isn’t the same. I think you’d have to take into account the entire column of compressed air from both bullets, Then add in ground effect. What about p-factor/spin drift, etc. Like you said, it would be impossible to test this. On a deployment we all argued this because we had a college kid that had just taken physics and wanted to argue all sorts of stuff. AirDrop shows physics 101 n leaves a lot to be desired outside of a vacuum. [/QUOTE]
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How High do bullets go in their flight trajectory
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