Re: Barrometric pressure
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 1ZNUF</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: sinister</div><div class="ubbcode-body">AIUK1, barometric pressure has less to do with influencing your ballistics than your station density altitude.
Simply, air is less dense (thinner) the higher you go and puts less drag on your bullet. Every thousand feet altitude you gain is as if you have another inch of barrel length -- your bullet will fly farther for the same launch speed out of the muzzle you had down in Dorset, Bisley, or Salisbury Plain. The same reason it takes a longer take-off or landing run for an airplane at Kandahar air base and a helicopter needs more power and pitch to hover in the Hindu Kush.
Having clueless officers is the reason snipers are never trained nor employed correctly. You can be the most expert SME, but if command doesn't know how to use you you end up being TOC guards. </div></div>
This has always been my experience with barometrics. It's the last thing I add to the dope if at all. Altitude, wind speed and vector, line of sight angle all figured more prominently for me than barometrics. I have reached the conclusion that for me, I can't hold steady enough to account for the impact change barometric differences cause. </div></div>
We don't as a general rule utilise non-qualified officers to run sniper cadres. Hence the surprise at such a basic mistake.
Unlike the U.S we do see 3 seasons in one day here on our ranges,...sometimes significant bara/DA and temp swings along with fast changing wind speeds and vectors/light conditions. Its the very reason why the OP did his test on Stickledown,...because of the difficult shooting conditions that can be experienced.