How accurate are ballistic calculators expected to be, specifically with regards to elevation? For me, the actual point of impact is about 1 MOA high at 200 yards when dialing for the ballistic calculator's predicted bullet drop.
I'll be shooting out past 500yds for the first time in a few weeks, so I used Berger's ballistic calculator to give me an idea of what I should dial for elevation at various distances (I'm shooting 140gr Berger Hybrids from my 6.5 creedmoor). To double check the calculator, I went out to the range today and with the scope zero'd at 100yds, I dialed up 0.5 mils and fired a couple shots at a 200yd paper target (the ballistic calculator predicted a 0.47mil drop at 200yds). However, I could see that this put my point of impact much higher than expected.
I used the scope's reticle to measure the difference between point of aim and point of impact, which was 0.3 mils, or about 2" (after I later retrieved the target, I measured the difference between the POA and POI to be almost exactly 2"). So I dialed my elevation turret back by 0.3 mils and impacted just at the bottom of the 1" square I was aiming at. Shot a 5-round group, and everything looked good.
Having never used a ballistic calculator before, maybe being off by 1 MOA is normal and I'm overthinking it. It was certainly good enough to get me on paper, but I was expecting it to be much closer than it was.
Some sources of errors that I've considered:
I'll be shooting out past 500yds for the first time in a few weeks, so I used Berger's ballistic calculator to give me an idea of what I should dial for elevation at various distances (I'm shooting 140gr Berger Hybrids from my 6.5 creedmoor). To double check the calculator, I went out to the range today and with the scope zero'd at 100yds, I dialed up 0.5 mils and fired a couple shots at a 200yd paper target (the ballistic calculator predicted a 0.47mil drop at 200yds). However, I could see that this put my point of impact much higher than expected.
I used the scope's reticle to measure the difference between point of aim and point of impact, which was 0.3 mils, or about 2" (after I later retrieved the target, I measured the difference between the POA and POI to be almost exactly 2"). So I dialed my elevation turret back by 0.3 mils and impacted just at the bottom of the 1" square I was aiming at. Shot a 5-round group, and everything looked good.
Having never used a ballistic calculator before, maybe being off by 1 MOA is normal and I'm overthinking it. It was certainly good enough to get me on paper, but I was expecting it to be much closer than it was.
Some sources of errors that I've considered:
- Incorrect velocity entered into the calculator. I'm using hand loads and I have a magnetospeed, so I have a pretty good idea of my actual velocity at the muzzle. When I saw the above discrepancy at the range, I threw the magnetospeed on the barrel and fired 15 shots which gave me an average velocity of 2679fps. I had entered 2680fps into the calculator, and double-checked to make sure I hadn't typed the wrong number into the calculator.
- Magnetospeed measurements are incorrect. According to the ballistic calculator, I'd need to be getting around 3,000fps at the muzzle in order to match the actual elevation drop I saw at the range. Even if the magnetospeed is somehow faulty, I don't see how I'd be getting that speed with a 140gr bullet and 40gr of H4350.
- Published BC doesn't match actual BC. I played around with the bullet's BC values in Berger's ballistic calculator, and even significant changes to the BC had minimal effect on the predicted drop at 200yds.
- Scope turrets don't track. I have a Nightforce SHV, which I know isn't a top-of-the-line scope, but it's not a $100 scope either. Not to mention that when I measured the elevation drop in the reticle and then dialed that drop on the turret, it worked fine. This is also how I zero'd at 100yds and had no issues there either.
- Berger's ballistic calculator is wrong. I tried another online ballistic calculator which gave me the same numbers as Berger's.
- The distance I'm shooting at isn't actually 200yds. It's advertised as 200yds and it looks like 200yds to me, but I don't have a range finder to verify that. The elevation drop I'm seeing is more consistent with the elevation drop of a target somewhere between 150-175yds, according to the ballistics calculator. The range is run by a local gun club so it's not just some targets set up in Billy-Joe's back yard, but maybe it's just a matter of false advertisement.