Two rifles: a CZ 455 .22 and a Tikka T3x Varmint .223. Both in MDT chassis. CZ zeroed at 50, Tikka at 100. Strelok Pro has been giving me excellent trajectory curves / settings for whatever range.
Until recently. Over the last few weeks, summer has definitely arrived in central North Carolina. I am now seeing POIs for both rifles at longer ranges (100-300 for .22, 400+ for .223) rises as much as 3-4 MOA over a 3-hour range session, and the Strelok-produced trajectories don't match the bullets' flight after 75 yards for .22 and 250-300 for the .223.
I thought maybe ammo was getting heat-soaked over time, rising from 74 degrees (A/C in house, car) to ambient (90-95) with concomitant velocity increase (all gear and ammo stay in the shade throughout the session). So I checked that today. I left .22 and .223 ammo in the car overnight to heat soak (garage stays hot in the North Carolina heat and humidity), also left some .22 and .223 ammo in a cooler surrounded by bottles of tap water in the house overnight. Thus, I had "hot" ammo and "cool" ammo at the range. Compared velocities via LabRadar. No significant difference; certainly not enough to explain the rising POIs at longer ranges.
Bottom line is, I am seeing impact points for two different rifles rise as much as 3-4 MOA and Strelok-predicted trajectories disintegrate as the day's heat increases, but muzzle velocity goes up minimally if at all. Zero remains good.
This is a relatively recent phenomenon - just since it got southern-summer-hot. Can the sun heating the ground (sparse grass dying on hardpan) to well over 100 degrees account for what I'm seeing? Any thoughts on how to deal with it?
Until recently. Over the last few weeks, summer has definitely arrived in central North Carolina. I am now seeing POIs for both rifles at longer ranges (100-300 for .22, 400+ for .223) rises as much as 3-4 MOA over a 3-hour range session, and the Strelok-produced trajectories don't match the bullets' flight after 75 yards for .22 and 250-300 for the .223.
I thought maybe ammo was getting heat-soaked over time, rising from 74 degrees (A/C in house, car) to ambient (90-95) with concomitant velocity increase (all gear and ammo stay in the shade throughout the session). So I checked that today. I left .22 and .223 ammo in the car overnight to heat soak (garage stays hot in the North Carolina heat and humidity), also left some .22 and .223 ammo in a cooler surrounded by bottles of tap water in the house overnight. Thus, I had "hot" ammo and "cool" ammo at the range. Compared velocities via LabRadar. No significant difference; certainly not enough to explain the rising POIs at longer ranges.
Bottom line is, I am seeing impact points for two different rifles rise as much as 3-4 MOA and Strelok-predicted trajectories disintegrate as the day's heat increases, but muzzle velocity goes up minimally if at all. Zero remains good.
This is a relatively recent phenomenon - just since it got southern-summer-hot. Can the sun heating the ground (sparse grass dying on hardpan) to well over 100 degrees account for what I'm seeing? Any thoughts on how to deal with it?