Re: 230 Berger (.743) past super sonic performance?
The drop in rate of velocity decay is pretty much guaranteed at subsonic speeds. It's not really at subsonic speeds but at speeds below the critical number.
This is all due to the fact that shock waves in a fluid take a lot of power to keep them and once the velocity drops below where the shockwaves form, the bullet is only experiencing viscous and parasitic drag, which is about 7-12% of the overall drag function at supersonic speeds, especially near the sound barrier where the Cd is very high.
This is easy to see when you look at a Cd vs. Velocity chart, note the shape where from the high speed side the Cd climbs slowly as the velocity approaches ~M1.5 then from 1.5 to 1.0 it climbs much more quickly, then at sonic crossing it drops abruptly to a mere fraction of the value it was at M3+ and especially M1-1.5