I realize your not interested in other Ideas. So please bare with me and I will answer your question.
I have no idea what experience you have with using and acquiring drop data.
Using a ballistic app is very simple its accurate and if your only shooting 125 yards your data can be off quite a bit before the prediction is outside of your group size/velocity ES. As littlepod noted we use this in matches for much further distances very successfully.
Some apps have a option to enter your Zeroing environmentals and then account for that as well. (Something I dont use)
Looking at 125 yards from 0⁰c-25⁰c (32⁰f- 77⁰f) the velocity change is approximately half of the total elevation shift the other half is due to air temp/air density. In order to do this with ammo velocity you would need to use double the actual velocity difference to equal the same drop unless you still use a app to account for air temperature changes. In which case you may as well just use the app.
Now does this actually work? The short answer is no. I have done testing looking at lots and their effects down range. BCs are not always consistent lot to lot even at the same velocity but normally very close. If we look at the drag coefficient from 1000 fps to 1300 there is a huge change so your measured drop at 100 yards does not perfectly correlate to velocity with out a BC change. If for instance we were always looking for 1070 fps this wouldn't be a issue but if we are to account for weather changes as well then our starting velocity will not be the same.
If we hit cold weather and your 1070 lot drops to 1040 you would need your 1130 lot that has now dropped to 1100 to have POI the same. But now with the higher velocity you have more time of flight at a higher drag because of the increased velocity further complicating it. You might be on at 100 yards and off at 50.
Now having said that there is some valid reasons to run a winter ammo and a summer. In my tests at 200 yards Eley force in the winter shot better then contact but as the weather warmed up and velocity increases the contact the shot the same as the force did at the same velocity. The force now at the higher velocity didnt shoot as good. But the drop data is different due to air temp changes yet.
Go have some fun and test it
shoot 100, 125, and 150 yards and measure actual drop. You will find some interesting things if you try a bunch of different ammo and how it tracks with velocity and a ballistic calculator.