Apollo
Jason Stanley
School year is going to start soon. Each year, I try to do a class project revolving around shooting. I am not allowed to actually go out and shoot during the school day with the class, but can on weekends or after school with parental approval, etc, then bring that data back to the class to use.
I am trying to think of topics. 2 years ago - we came up with a spreadsheet that estimates the load density based on powder type, bullet configuration, bullet depth, case capacity, etc. Last year, we did another spreadsheet examining patterns in 100 yd score shooting. This year I was thinking about doing something with wind flags. Need to get outside.
I was under the assumption that all wind flags, used by the same shooter, had to be the same(material, size, double vs single, etc), in order for them to behave the same. I shoot over Hood flags and assumed I would have to buy only Hood flags from now on. A friend of mine shot in a match and noticed several people had different sized flags and asked them if that mattered and they all said "no". Physically, that doesn't make sense to me. I would think that a smaller vane would show more "turnage"(that is a great scientific word)than a bigger vane. I thought this might be a good project for this year's physics class.
I do have access to a wind meter and can go to the range(private) any time. It seems pretty straight forward, but any comments, suggestions, things to look out for, or other topics would be appreciated. Thanks for your time.
Stanley
I am trying to think of topics. 2 years ago - we came up with a spreadsheet that estimates the load density based on powder type, bullet configuration, bullet depth, case capacity, etc. Last year, we did another spreadsheet examining patterns in 100 yd score shooting. This year I was thinking about doing something with wind flags. Need to get outside.
I was under the assumption that all wind flags, used by the same shooter, had to be the same(material, size, double vs single, etc), in order for them to behave the same. I shoot over Hood flags and assumed I would have to buy only Hood flags from now on. A friend of mine shot in a match and noticed several people had different sized flags and asked them if that mattered and they all said "no". Physically, that doesn't make sense to me. I would think that a smaller vane would show more "turnage"(that is a great scientific word)than a bigger vane. I thought this might be a good project for this year's physics class.
I do have access to a wind meter and can go to the range(private) any time. It seems pretty straight forward, but any comments, suggestions, things to look out for, or other topics would be appreciated. Thanks for your time.
Stanley
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