Was trying to make a print out range card for different temps/altitudes for my 22LR to keep in the data book.
I put in the exact data in setting up a rifle/bullet/turret profile in FFS as I do in JBM. Exact same environmental, zero, exact same bullet velocity, BC, etc and then run a simple range card.
By 200 yards, JBM is already .6mil different in elevation (.6 less than FFS) even though everything is 100% identical. I know from shooting it literally everyday, that the FFS data is undisputed.
It isn't until I basically just keep reducing the BC in JBM manually from .172 to .118 that they then match up 99% of the way. Mind you, this isn't 'truing' published BC vs shooting BC, but rather, just calculator input vs calculator input straight across the board.
Usually any straight input data I've put into other calculators are always .1 or so different, but this is a huge swing that started at basically 50 yards from a 25 yard zero. Is JBM just not that great, or whats the deal?
I put in the exact data in setting up a rifle/bullet/turret profile in FFS as I do in JBM. Exact same environmental, zero, exact same bullet velocity, BC, etc and then run a simple range card.
By 200 yards, JBM is already .6mil different in elevation (.6 less than FFS) even though everything is 100% identical. I know from shooting it literally everyday, that the FFS data is undisputed.
It isn't until I basically just keep reducing the BC in JBM manually from .172 to .118 that they then match up 99% of the way. Mind you, this isn't 'truing' published BC vs shooting BC, but rather, just calculator input vs calculator input straight across the board.
Usually any straight input data I've put into other calculators are always .1 or so different, but this is a huge swing that started at basically 50 yards from a 25 yard zero. Is JBM just not that great, or whats the deal?