My recommended initial Sg of 3.0 is based on damping out any significant initial bullet yaw as quickly as possible during the bullet's highest-drag early flight. In David's case, I believe that he was able to fire these new bullets without them having "significant initial bullet yaw" when they began aeroballistic flight, so the initial Sg did not matter very much. The crosswind recorded at the firing point was only 10 mph, for example, so his initial crosswind yaw was only 4.2 milliradians (0.24-degrees) at his very high average MV of 3394 fps. Minimum long-term yaw in hyper-stable flight is something less than 0.10-degrees due to gravity. His muzzle brake did not induce significant yaw or yaw-rate due, no doubt, to its good design. The convex base of these new bullets probably helped also by minimizing yaw disturbance in the muzzle-blast zone (as I intended). We simply cannot always fire our copper bullets this well. Spinning these copper bullets faster than sometimes needed cannot hurt anything.