
Its what's on paper that counts if you remain well over transonic speeds at long range. Extreme spread velocities show up in the elevation.
Could be a head space issue with that high speed Chris?

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williada wrote:You don't need a chronograph.. Here's how to do it without one if you are desperate. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZxizte6foI
Its what's on paper that counts if you remain well over transonic speeds at long range. Extreme spread velocities show up in the elevation.
Could be a head space issue with that high speed Chris?i.e. round bumped way back. Just joking, but there is an element of truth in that which relates to case volume and high pressure. One, not that high in project Penumbra with issued blue box used at Bisley which was a hundred feet faster and a definite outlier. Did not believe the velocity at first but thought otherwise when the other equipment confirmed higher temperature and higher pressure for the same shot out of the machine rest.
pjifl wrote:Here are whole lot of odds and ends relating to this. BTW, I do not dispute that Chris's experience happened but I have never seen anything like that. We will never know why !
An error caused by sighting the LR at an angle to the trajectory would be predicted by considering goemetry.
1 degree aiming error could produce a 1 to 2 % error. This increases more or less linearly up to about 5 degrees.
This also applies to a MagnetoSpeed and old Optical or screen Chronograph as well.
Place the LR very close to the muzzle and take great care to reduce aiming error.
Misalignment of the LR will also reduce the signal strength of the echo as well as introducing a cosine error (as above).
I have shot through two inline Magnetospeeds. I had 3 to choose from and tried different combinations. The disagreement was quite high and WAS QUITE INCONSISTENT FOR EACH SHOT. One might expect one MS to be consistently higher or lower but this was masked a lot by erratic disagreements. When MSs came out, they helped me improve my shooting but I trust them less than LR. I have also shot through an older optical Chrono in line with MS. Again agreement was quite erratic within each shot.
Trying to determine velocity or ballistic coefficient by working back from fall of shot as in that video carries a huge error budget. It is about the worst possible method - especially to calculate ballistic coefficient. One has to make huge assumptions about the shooter, rifle, barrel, and atmosphere. Remember that Aerodynamic Jump will also influence bullet height as well and may even vary for each shot.
In any case it is like a dog chasing its tail and the errors become circular.
There are ways to measure bullet velocity - some almost entirely mechanical but very few people will want to perform the experiments. Shooting through two spaced spinning paper disks is one. Another is the ballistic pendulum.
A warning - never use conservation of energy, rather conservation of momentum when reducing data for the ballistic pendulum. But also never shoot very close up into the pendulum - splashback can be dangerous. I used to perform a lab experiment for classes way back in the 60s with an air rifle. It was a different world back then and this was a small rural school and everyone had firearms.
Unfortunately, there is an error budget even with these methods but at least there is no or almost no dependence on unknown calibration of some bought in instruments.
If you only want a rough measurement, all of these are useful. But as for fine accuracy we use to draw conclusions, that is just not so.
Peter Smith.
williada wrote:...Don't know how to convince people to move beyond 100 yard testing with boat tail bullets.
pjifl wrote:Willadia wrote
Don't know how to convince people to move beyond 100 yard testing with boat tail bullets.
We will never get much sense across while everyone believes all the crap on glitchy web sites - many of which are simply another form of advertising. Very few people these days are after truth.
Peter Smith.
williada wrote:Yep Chris, I was having a bit of fun even with the video. I only use chrono's et al, as a rough guide. There maybe something in that 30 fps anomaly as you suggest as Peter has indicated with the echo strength and the cosine error. I make a point of getting the muzzle as close as possible to the LR at its mid point on the side of it. On balance I think you had a LR glitch. If it continued to give errant readings on an open range, I would want a replacement. I'm going to take up Barry's suggestion and look through the casing of a ball point pen because I think alignment is critical.
I do note that my LR was within a few fps of the Rosedale club's MS a couple of years ago shooting in the open. At another time, my readings were not consistent under their 1000 yards shelter compared to home testing of the same load. Maybe I was to close to the shelter posts or the echo from the roof at Rosedale and I got higher readings compared to home even discounting the atmospheric conditions, I will never know.
I have always relied on group shape and trend to do load development because graphed velocity data looking flat spots to compare with resonant nodes doesn't always correlate. Yet when they do my confidence rises. Certainly a false 30 fps could pop you over the energy limits on some ranges if your node lies close to the energy limit. It would certainly divert your attention away from a prospective group. That's why I always trust the paper and do initial load development at 140 yards as I have suggested for 20 years, outside the influence of aerodynamic jump etc. If your results can be duplicated and records are kept of groups then better decisions can be made.
Don't know how to convince people to move beyond 100 yard testing with boat tail bullets.
Pommy Chris wrote:...I agree 100 yards proves nothing.
Chris
AlanF wrote:Pommy Chris wrote:...I agree 100 yards proves nothing.
Chris
Opinions vary on that. Some very accomplished shooters swear by 100yd load development. I've always preferred 500 ladders as a minimum, but desperate times call for desperate measures.
Gyro wrote:I must be missing something because I've never shot a one hole group at 100 yards, hence I can get a very good idea at that distance of many things that are happening.