M
model14
Guest
Boyd
If a bullet is only pushed to the side and the nose does not turn to follow the wind then it would resume it's original direction once it is past the wind. If you are shooting 1000 yards and there is a 1 MOA crosswind from the muzzle out to 100 yards, and then calm from 200 yards to the target, are you saying that the wind deflection at the target will only be 1"? I wish it were so. That's why the wind closest to the muzzle is the most important. Once the bullet turns to follow the wind that's the direction it will continue on until changed by other factors.
Ray
Ray,
Please describe "follow the wind". Are you saying a bullet turns left when encountering a cross wind from the right? If so that is totally counter to what I have always thought and observed (airplanes, sailboats, arrows, etc.). Do you know what "heave to" means in regard to a sail boat? It means to center the mainsail boom and let the boat run free into the wind. It turns into the wind, always. So does my airplane when the wheels leave the ground and so does the arrow I shoot.
I guess it is possible that if the center of gravity is aft of the center of pressure of the bullet, and there was no spin stability, then a downwind turn could happen. I just don't see it. maybe I have always been wrong and didn't really see what I thought I was seeing and feeling.
Anyway, it is just a discussion which isn't going to make either one of us shoot better.
Richard