Chrony calibration
Moderator: Mod
-
- Posts: 7532
- Joined: Wed Jun 15, 2005 8:22 pm
- Location: Maffra, Vic
- Has thanked: 229 times
- Been thanked: 936 times
Re: Chrony calibration
Good question. I don't know of any that are available as a service. I find that simply lining several different "field grade" chronos in series gives a good sanity check. The Magnetospeeds and LabRadar are the ones I have the most respect for, because most others are affected by light levels.
-
- Posts: 895
- Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2014 8:22 pm
- Location: far north brisbane
- Has thanked: 327 times
- Been thanked: 161 times
Re: Chrony calibration
Yeh, I've had it up against a Labrador, that's how I found out it's about 100 fps slow. I bought it through a bloke in WA a few years ago because he offered services here in Australia. But as usual, now that I want to use the service, I can't find the contact or purchase details.
-
- Posts: 2211
- Joined: Sun Sep 07, 2008 7:55 pm
- Location: Brisbane
- Has thanked: 71 times
- Been thanked: 92 times
Re: Chrony calibration
From what I've discovered, it is as easy to correlate results & field shooting against a reliable ballistics program. I'm happy with my 15 plus years old Oehler 35 for the information I use from it & mostly that's to identify whether on not loads have an acceptable extreme spread supported by SD.
Magnetospeeds are not for me because I can't fit them around a Shadetree tuner & Labradars are beyond my price range - relative to a good annealer, for example.
Magnetospeeds are not for me because I can't fit them around a Shadetree tuner & Labradars are beyond my price range - relative to a good annealer, for example.