This week I posted a question about powder density, and “BC is King” debate came up about my bullet weight choice. I agree that BC is king, but after reading Applied Ballistics For Long Range Shooting I decided to do an analysis of my bullet weight options using the Litz ballistic software included with the book.
Assertion – The higher BC of a 6.5 142smk is a better choice over the 6.5 123Scenar for shooting 1000yds.
Data
142smk 123Scenar
Velocity(muzzle) 2750fps 2950fps
G(7)coeffeicient .301 .270
Length 1.375 1.304
Atmosphere for both – standard, 10mph cross wind, no spin drift calculated.
Results
142smk 123Scenar
Drop(1000yds) 323in 293in
Time of flight 1.52s 1.46s
Drift 74.7in 77.4in
Stability 1.71 1.52
Conclusion – the assertion is false. The higher BC bullet is not significantly ballistically superior to the lower BC bullet. The stability of the 123scenar is above the 1.4 threshold for stable flight.
Is this process correct for deciding bullet choice?
Assertion – The higher BC of a 6.5 142smk is a better choice over the 6.5 123Scenar for shooting 1000yds.
Data
142smk 123Scenar
Velocity(muzzle) 2750fps 2950fps
G(7)coeffeicient .301 .270
Length 1.375 1.304
Atmosphere for both – standard, 10mph cross wind, no spin drift calculated.
Results
142smk 123Scenar
Drop(1000yds) 323in 293in
Time of flight 1.52s 1.46s
Drift 74.7in 77.4in
Stability 1.71 1.52
Conclusion – the assertion is false. The higher BC bullet is not significantly ballistically superior to the lower BC bullet. The stability of the 123scenar is above the 1.4 threshold for stable flight.
Is this process correct for deciding bullet choice?