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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Working up .357 Mag load for Bears
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<blockquote data-quote="kc0pph" data-source="post: 550135" data-attributes="member: 35934"><p>I am one of those cheap people who just cries every time i give money for something that i can easily do myself. A good chrono is $100, ive invested many hours into the development of a doppler chrono, another which when my father and i do release it will be the most accurate chrono on the market, that can be used in any light condition. As for right now we are working on the programming of a PIC18F to do the math for the 2 optic sensors that we will use (mimicing standard ones on the market). </p><p> </p><p>So the short answer is we have an experamental one, but it has yet to be calibrated, and them darn pesky BB's moving really fast sometimes are not seen by it. Hopefully in a week we will have a working prototype. </p><p> </p><p>According to the load data i found online I should be romping with the 7.5 at 1085 fps, but that seems 50-75 fps slower than i would think.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="kc0pph, post: 550135, member: 35934"] I am one of those cheap people who just cries every time i give money for something that i can easily do myself. A good chrono is $100, ive invested many hours into the development of a doppler chrono, another which when my father and i do release it will be the most accurate chrono on the market, that can be used in any light condition. As for right now we are working on the programming of a PIC18F to do the math for the 2 optic sensors that we will use (mimicing standard ones on the market). So the short answer is we have an experamental one, but it has yet to be calibrated, and them darn pesky BB's moving really fast sometimes are not seen by it. Hopefully in a week we will have a working prototype. According to the load data i found online I should be romping with the 7.5 at 1085 fps, but that seems 50-75 fps slower than i would think. [/QUOTE]
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Working up .357 Mag load for Bears
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