Re: How accurate is Google Earth for rangefinding?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I was shooting a mile the other day,and was coming up a good 3 moa short</div></div>
Expecting precise elevation predictions from a ballistic program presupposes a few things, some of which are difficult to know, and some of which cannot be known precisely.
You must have precise knowledge of the velocity of each shot, well beyond the ability of most chronographs to measure even the average muzzle velocity of a group of shots, and you must know the temperature response of the muzzle velocity of your load.
You must know the real ballistic coefficient of the bullet you are shooting, which not only changes with velocity, but also varies a bit from bullet to bullet.
You must have carefully calibrated the click value of your scope, so that you know precisely what elevation you are dialing. And that value may not be linear, so measuring it over just one range is insufficient.
You must take into consideration the Eötvös effect, what most people refer to, but isn't, coriolis effect.
You must take into consideration the elevation variation introduced by headwind or tailwind components, which means that you must have some means of measuring those components over the entire course of the trajectory.
And, of course, we've already mentioned the range problem.
What I'm trying to say is that at the range you are talking about, I'd be astonished if an uncorrected program produced a prediction within 3 MOA.
The program I use the most, Field Firing Solutions, has a method of tailoring the program solution to match field data, though, so the next time I shot at that distance, it would produce better predictions.