Re: Spin Drift
usftr,
You are sort of over-simplifying what I am saying, but I will expand so you understand.
I am saying the variables involved in the shot at that distance are much more in-depth than just stating a flat rate number as advocated by many will work. And generally doesn't work for all. I see hundreds of students a year and consistently shoot out to 1000 yards under a variety of circumstances. Factors include:
Differences in Barrel Twists and builds... which directly effect changes in drift.
Differences in muzzle velocity and ammunition used
Conditions as they exist across 1000 yards plus, as much as 15ft above the line of sight - a 1 MPH mistake in the wind mean an much as 10" at 1000 yards, a 1/2 MPH mistake is roughly 5", so in order to "see" the difference you are saying over the course of 1000 yards, and 15ft above the line of sight you can judge the wind to 1 MPH.
The Shooter... including errors in trigger, follow through, position, NPA, breathing... all that can influence and do influence the course of the bullet.
Errors in the scope adjustment, inherent thickness of the reticle which covers more than than the stated SD value.
Recent example of scope errors
As a point of reference, I will bring your attention to a document which discusses the variables which can effect a ballistic calculation when using a computer program.
Ballistic Program Inaccuracies
The fact we can see, and have recorded as much as 2 Mils of difference in holds at 1000 yards between a left handed shooter and a right handed shooter speaks volumes to this subject of shooter induced errors. And cannot be overlooked by any stretch of the imagination.
That fact all the SD values I know of have been shot from only a limited combination of barrels and ammunition from a fixture. And that results from fixtures rarely translate accurately to humans under field conditions.
The inference that "no marksmanship can see the results, I never made, however I will contend that 99% of marksman cannot discern the accuracy necessary to utilize adding .1MRAD at 1000 yards. or .36" or an inch. as stated, from 650m to 950m, you are saying its 3.6" -- well that is very noticeable at 650, and much less noticeable at 950. If you think about that, for all the years we had wind charts, and used wind corrections people would have routinely recorded significant problems with wind charts that give an equal value from right to left, the left wind would be too much the right wind not enough if you are adding 3.6" at 650m. Rarely is this heard of... it's not until the advent of ballistics computers do we now see greater and greater need to adjust for SD... because they model it to fit a pre-designated program. Again, check your ballistic calculator for a 1000 yards no wind shot with SD and then change the zero range... my bet the number remains constant. In case you missed it the first time, the USMC asked that the SD adjustments be removed from the ballistic calculator they had a hand in working on. This I can show you has I have both copies, one with and one without.
My point is, being an instructor, I see all types of shooters, and a whole lot of trigger issues. The targets above are repeated over 7 pages, and then more numerous types across a variety of shooting websites, not just this one. The pattern is clear, the errors point to pulled shots that go right generally a 1/2" at 100 yards, and that shooter above was consistently hitting a 1/4" dot, except when pulled it right. So, one can say he forgot to account for spindrift or despite his excellent shooting he has a habit as must right handed shooters do, of pulling right.
target size, well they vary, but will tell as most can attest, I have two out of 3 targets on the Rifles Only 1000 yard berm which measure 8.75" X 14.75" and I use that to practice on... however I also use a Larue, which is 11.75" which with a value of .75" MOA dialed in, or should say not dialed in would result in a miss if I did not include it. I must be so talented to always blow my wind calls in favor of not using SD instead of the other way around. As far as ASC, I don't have all the target sizes in front of me. The Raton Sporting Rifle Matches hover around 1 MOA or less.