Re: Spin Drift at 1500 yards
Just because a ballistic calculator is calculating it, doesn't necessarily mean it is doing anything more than giving you a flat rate, most of which was based on the 308 going 2550fps with I believe a 1-12 barrel. So my question has always been, if it's telling me to use 1 MOA <span style="font-style: italic">(which most do at 1000 yards)</span> and then they give you some percentage of 1 MOA inside that distance and out, <span style="font-style: italic">(which is why people have begun to dial it at 600 yards or so)</span>, aren't you still adding error in if your bullet is actually flying better, like with a 300WM which shows the SD to be half of the 308 number.
My point, if they say a 300WM is 5" @ 1000 and the 308 is 10" @ 1000, based off the older information as most use, what if your actual SD is 7" @ 1000 ? Do we say, well the .25 here or there is okay, which is essentially what i am saying. The USMC taught that it was really only a factor at the point in which the bullet slowed down and begun to transition from supersonic, so that is why you find them not referencing it for the most part. In retained supersonic flight with better barrels and bullets, the number I have seen puts it closer to .3 MOA to .6 MOA @ 1000 which is why they and I mostly ignore it.
My biggest bother in all this is guys have walked in the door of the classroom who dial this stuff at 400 yards and say it makes a difference, or say, how they had trouble hitting something until they started dialing it and found out they are in fact using 2 MOA at 1000 yards. <span style="font-style: italic">(we heard this a lot) </span> It has become the worse game of telephone out there, guys see their trigger errors show up downrange dial left and call it SD then claim they are seeing the difference. With my shooting I never "saw it" until well beyond 1000 yards.
ExBal the original ballistic program had the shooter actually "shoot" the target and measure it... because he knew.
If we were smart, and I think we are, especially going back to the 60s and 70s, you would ask yourself, why didn't we <span style="font-style: italic">(being a country in the Northern Hemisphere)</span> simply move to exclusively use Left Twist Barrels, to negate a large portion of the effects, by having SD and CE cancel each other ? Instead of constantly having this "essential" adjustment hanging over every shooter's head, just remove it as much as mechanically possible from the system ? Maybe they felt it wasn't worth the effort ? Opened ended I know but still begs discussion on from those who are more inside than I.
If I was building a cutting edge dedicated ELR rifles, it would in fact have a Left hand twist... maybe a gain twist, but definitely turning to the left.
Everyone likes to quote Hatcher, McCoy, etc... Pesja has less than 1 page for both CE and SD in Modern Practical Ballistics, and goes on to summarize both by saying,
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The effect of gyroscopic drift is difficult to analyze precisely because of many variables are involved. Drift tables, which have been determined mainly from well controlled army and navy tests, indicate that gyroscopic drift is roughly double the effect of Coriolis drift, and thus is also negligible for most purposes. It is interesting to note that with counterclockwise or left-twist barrel rifling, gyroscopic drift is to the left in the northern hemisphere and more than cancels the effects of Coriolis Drift. </div></div>
He says calculating both, that CE is about 1" @ 700 yards and if SD is double that, say 2" @ 700, how it goes to 10+" from 2" ? I suspect it is the transonic nature of the bullets originally tested, but then again it might just be my thinking on 1 man's opinion based on his figures provided, but I also look at the time he spends on it to come to those conclusions as well my own experience.
No I agree it is there, but my question is from where it has gone, from .6 to 2 MOA, and he further states because it is an extremely small effect, and is constant and repeatable, it is negligible for most purposes. Here he is not talking ELR, but he is definitely talking 1000 yards and in... hence my conclusions and resistance to the necessity.