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Get Access SubscribeI fumbled around for about my first 8 years making ammo before I was confident I "knew what I was doing". And I'm still learning.I’m still fumbling around with this stuff. It’s a good excuse to shoot!
You see those curves?
The points where the curvature reverses, either upward or downward, indicate the nodes.
What this signifies is that within that curvature reversal, velocity deviations have less effect on accuracy. The more sharply vertical, the more effect; the more horizontal, the less effect.
That's what a node is.
You can get this info from a chrono, or you can get it from the target.
From the chrono, that info is statistical, and needs a lot of data points before it becomes reliable. Those data points also represent degrading bore life. The conclusions are really just an extrapolation, and not actual performance ontarget.
The target is direct, not an extrapolation; and the target just about never lies.
I have a use for my chrono. I use it when load development is done; in order to extrapolate trajectory performance from the resultant muzzle velocity. It only tells part of that story, too.
It makes zero reference to atmospheric conditions downrange. In essence, once the bullet gets downrange by a few feet, all bets are off without also incorporating those additional factors.
We didn't always have chronos. That lack didn't keep us from shooting accurately. It has been made more accurate, and more complex with the addition. Every time we add a step to a process, we also add another opportunity to make a mistake.
Greg
You obviously know a universe more than I do. And with all due respect you are talking way over my head. Is there anything useful in my graph? I am working with what I have and a range that only goes to 200yds so it is hard to work up the loads by targets. I do have a chronograph. I don’t compete or have funds to shoot enough to even be concerned about barrel life, to say I had shot out a barrel would be a glory day.You see those curves?
The points where the curvature reverses, either upward or downward, indicate the nodes.
What this signifies is that within that curvature reversal, velocity deviations have less effect on accuracy. The more sharply vertical, the more effect; the more horizontal, the less effect.
That's what a node is.
You can get this info from a chrono, or you can get it from the target.
From the chrono, that info is statistical, and needs a lot of data points before it becomes reliable. Those data points also represent degrading bore life. The conclusions are really just an extrapolation, and not actual performance ontarget.
The target is direct, not an extrapolation; and the target just about never lies.
I have a use for my chrono. I use it when load development is done; in order to extrapolate trajectory performance from the resultant muzzle velocity. It only tells part of that story, too.
It makes zero reference to atmospheric conditions downrange. In essence, once the bullet gets downrange by a few feet, all bets are off without also incorporating those additional factors.
We didn't always have chronos. That lack didn't keep us from shooting accurately. It has been made more accurate, and more complex with the addition. Every time we add a step to a process, we also add another opportunity to make a mistake.
Greg
You obviously know a universe more than I do. And with all due respect you are talking way over my head. Is there anything useful in my graph? I am working with what I have and a range that only goes to 200yds so it is hard to work up the loads by targets. I do have a chronograph. I don’t compete or have funds to shoot enough to even be concerned about barrel life, to say I had shot out a barrel would be a glory day.
If you tightly control your loading process...
I don’t take it as a attack, far from it, I just am not comprehending whether any of you guys see anything there. I am so novice (and far from young) that I take anything as constructive.Ninja;
My commentary was not meant as an attack or even as a disagreement. I solely attempting to translate a graphic into a simple explanation.
Dthomas;
We're also in pretty near complete agreement. I don't have access to pin gauges, and have come to dread lugging more gear, including tripods and chronos, all the way down (50 miles) to the range; I'm already lugging too much as it is, and I'm no longer a reliable pack mule.
About 15 years ago, my Wife and I got handed a few unpleasant surprises that make the key factor in our lives one of simplicity. My key strategy has been about still getting what I want while complying with all of that folderol.
Perfection plays no role. It's overkill.
Live long and prosper! I do...
Greg
What round/load are we commenting on; because it looks like a dead ringer for my own 7.62x51/175SMK/IMR-4064 load. Back in the day (late 1990's) I had written it up in Precision Shooting.
Greg
6mm Creedmoor, 105gr Berger Hybrid Federal 210m primer and Staball 6.5 powder, any more info you require I would be glad to provide. It appears I was correct in my assessment that you know a Universe more than I do. I value the knowledge that such as yourself have but please reply in terms that a novice can understandHappy to help, may I help you further?
Oh, and yes; 42.2, and 43...
What round/load are we commenting on; because it looks like a dead ringer for my own 7.62x51/175SMK/IMR-4064 load. Back in the day (late 1990's) I had written it up in Precision Shooting.
GI 7.62x51 NATO brass (these days IMI), 175SMK at 2.815" COAL, Large Match Primer (I use CCI BR-2), and 42.2gr of IMR-4064.
Greg
I don’t understand the graph but I have been writing down all shot data, I will try to work up averagesAre those individual shots that you are using for data points or are those averages of more than one data point?
If individual shots, how do you know if they are actually low in relation to other charge weights or are they only low in relation to the total variance of the load itself?
View attachment 7266824
I don’t understand the graph but I have been writing down all shot data, I will try to work up averages
I don’t understand the graph but I have been writing down all shot data, I will try to work up averages
Basically what he’s saying is if it’s a single shot, it’s unknown if the velocity data is in the high, middle, or low end of you ES in that given load.