Just sent to DT re: TRASOL. We'll see if they respond
"Hi, I'm a local long range shooter, been using the HTI SRS and TRASOL since they first came out!
TRASOL has a small oversight that is easily fixed. For the scope correction factor, it only allows 3 decimals. That means if you know your scope is off by just 0.5%, meaning instead of coming up 0.1 MRAD it comes up 0.0995 MRAD, the "5" in the 4th decimal position is lost, and you may as well not use the feature, because when it rounds to 0.099 (which it does!), you now have exactly the same error but in the opposite direction! So the feature only helps guys with crappy scopes that have greater than 1% tracking error. Simple fix too, just add another decimal!
One other thing is that you ought to be able to lock the output units (MOA/MRAD) for the ballistic solution for each gun. For example, I shoot with guys using both MOA and MRAD, and right now if I select MRAD for one gun and then change to a gun with a scope that's in MOA (and the inputs for each rifle even specify MOA or MRAD on the rifle setup screen!), it defaults to the prior MRAD setting for the new gun output, which, if I'm not paying attention, I tell the MOA shooter "come up 1.0!" but he dials MOA rather than MRAD because he's shooting an MOA scope. If a gun is set up with an MRAD (or MOA) scope in the setup screen, all ballistic output under that gun should be in MRAD (or MOA). I don't know why somebody would even want the option to change the output on the ballistic screen (e.g. report output in MRAD for a gun setup in trasol with an MOA scope), but if the option is there, the starting default should always be the one entered on the gun-specific settings page.
I am also patiently awaiting a temperature correction factor for powder, even though I'm getting away from Alliant powders. I'm still using them some and it would be nice if I could document the "zero temperature" and have the App automatically add/subtract some amount of velocity per degree change when the ballistic output is delivered, e.g, 1fps/degree F. If I had a zero at 40 degrees and 2900 fps, when I go out in summer and it's 90 degrees, it would change the velocity to 2950 fps.
Just some thoughts. Thanks for listening.
Scott A...
SLC, UT"