goodgrouper
tryingtobeabettergrouper
This calm condition/big group scenario has puzzled shooters for many years and it was only after I began shooting in the tunnel that I finally realized what I believe causes the problem. Wake turbulence!
My approach to anything is always influenced by a lifelong love of flying. You would be amazed at how much flying and shooting have in common.
Picture this. You arrive at the airport early in the morning and there is not a leaf moving. You climb into your little single engine airplane and taxi out for departure. The tower clears you for takeoff and adds, "Caution wake turbulence; departed DC-9 two minutes ago. You pour the coal to all 100 horses and begin your takeoff roll.
After lift off, everything is going great and the air is perfectly smooth when suddenly the little airplane pitches and rolls violently as if it flew into a storm. And that's exactly what has happened; it flew into the wake of the departed DC-9. Had there been a little crosswind, the wake would have been drifted downwind and out of the departure path. Do you suppose the same thing happens to our bullets when we shoot in a dead calm?
If there is no movement of the air mass, the wake of preceeding bullets remains in the flight path creating a rough ride for those that follow.
Later,
Gene Beggs
This phenomenon could have also certainly been the culprit. It makes sense. How long do you think the wakes would remain in the path of incoming bullets?