Take your highly technical mind back to post #3 and have another go at the reading! This image was directed at the discussion of stability post transition from supersonic to subsonic (directly in reference to someone asking for impacts at 300-400yds). You'll see the nice round splatters on the steel. This was only to show stability at extreme range. It was very windy and the range is in a canyon, so yeah, many of the rounds were landing off the steel somewhere to the left or right, but they were all stable. A few hit the dirt below and ricocheted into the steel (the two less than round spaltters)Please do not take this as a personal attack.
When I see this or read of “banging steel at 400 yards” it’s utterly meaningless to anyone with a technical mind.
I understand the ease and recreation of shooting metal targets. Yet technically it is of no value. Conveys zero useful data. We have no idea if you shot 500 shots to get those hits or 50 shots.
When you are “banging steel” are you shooting a 3” round or a trash dumpster. Car door?
If you want to provide useful information put up a paper target large enough to catch every shot.
It conveys one extremely useful and simple piece of data -- HV ammo is still flying true at 400 yards.