RustyRick
Well-Known Member
At 330 yrs (24 X scope, bench & sand bags) what kind of elevation/vertical would youz considered a NODE?
When I've done ladder tests at 250 yards a good vertical node is less than half and inch.
I'd expect considerably less than an inch at 330 yards but have no direct experience at that distance.
It won't be linear with range; physically impossible. The bullet slows down and drops more for each 100 yard increment of range.What causes this. Theoretically according to your table that change should be linear.
It won't be linear with range; physically impossible.What causes this. Theoretically according to your table that change should be linear.
It won't be linear with range; physically impossible.
The bullet slows down and drops more for each 100 yard increment of range. For example, the .243's bullet drops .16 inch (.16 MOA) in the first 100 yards; in the last 100 yards from 400 to 500, its drop difference is 2.32 inch (.464 MOA) compared to 3.26 inch more to 5.58 inch (1.12 MOA) difference at 500. Time of flight over the last hundred yards is greater than the first hundred.