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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Science this 200 yard shot anomaly
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<blockquote data-quote="Rifleman97" data-source="post: 1574028" data-attributes="member: 103996"><p>I'm not sure what the phenomenon is you're taking about? The dots that appear to be the Bullet in multiple places at once?</p><p>If that's the case it's caused by shutter speed of the camera, if your camera shutter works right to left, then it would get the bullet in one pass, and in the next pass the bullet would be past it, but it catches up and in another pass (all on the same frame) it would catch the bullet again, and by the time the frame ends and it goes on to the next, the bullet has moved and it's all over again.</p><p></p><p>The reason it's showing up so well here is the angle to the bullet. If the camera was near directly in line with the projectile it would not have this effect. Too much angle and the bullet would be faster than the shutter relative to the camera so it wouldn't catch it.</p><p></p><p>Otherwise, a little clarification on what exactly you're meaning would be nice and then I might be able to answer that as well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rifleman97, post: 1574028, member: 103996"] I’m not sure what the phenomenon is you’re taking about? The dots that appear to be the Bullet in multiple places at once? If that’s the case it’s caused by shutter speed of the camera, if your camera shutter works right to left, then it would get the bullet in one pass, and in the next pass the bullet would be past it, but it catches up and in another pass (all on the same frame) it would catch the bullet again, and by the time the frame ends and it goes on to the next, the bullet has moved and it’s all over again. The reason it’s showing up so well here is the angle to the bullet. If the camera was near directly in line with the projectile it would not have this effect. Too much angle and the bullet would be faster than the shutter relative to the camera so it wouldn’t catch it. Otherwise, a little clarification on what exactly you’re meaning would be nice and then I might be able to answer that as well. [/QUOTE]
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Science this 200 yard shot anomaly
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