I read the usual debate over the higher BC, lighter, flatter shooting bullets like the 155 Scenars vs the heavier, lower BC, slower bullets like the 178 AMAX.
MY question is: all thing being equal - which is going to be affected by the wind more?
I get the love for flatter trajectories, but to me - I would think I would want something that gets pushed around by the wind less would be preferable than a flatter trajectory. For me, the trajectory is fixed for a given condition - so who cares if its flat or more parabolic? As long as you have good dope - lofting a heavy bullet will still hit the target compared to a faster, flatter bullet. OTOH, a slower heavier bullet that gets pushed by the wind less to me seems more desirable. Running some quick calcs on JBM, for .308 - it seems like you have to get a 155 Scenar screaming fast (3000 fps+) for it to perform better in wind than a slower 175SMK or 178AMAX in the 2600-2650 range.
To me, trajectory is a known value I can dial for. Windage is the big unknown. Shouldn't I care more about wind than whether a bullet shoots flat or not?
Thoughts?
MY question is: all thing being equal - which is going to be affected by the wind more?
I get the love for flatter trajectories, but to me - I would think I would want something that gets pushed around by the wind less would be preferable than a flatter trajectory. For me, the trajectory is fixed for a given condition - so who cares if its flat or more parabolic? As long as you have good dope - lofting a heavy bullet will still hit the target compared to a faster, flatter bullet. OTOH, a slower heavier bullet that gets pushed by the wind less to me seems more desirable. Running some quick calcs on JBM, for .308 - it seems like you have to get a 155 Scenar screaming fast (3000 fps+) for it to perform better in wind than a slower 175SMK or 178AMAX in the 2600-2650 range.
To me, trajectory is a known value I can dial for. Windage is the big unknown. Shouldn't I care more about wind than whether a bullet shoots flat or not?
Thoughts?