goodgrouper
tryingtobeabettergrouper
Been looking through some old Precision Shooting magazines lately and came across an article about loads going in and out of tune with humidity. The author said that he had a load that he would "pre-load" at home and it would shoot fantastic until the humidity became too high.
Well, being a ballistic nut and avid chronographer, I was confused by the "science" of this article. Why? Because in all my years of shooting from 11,000 feet to 2000 feet of elevation and from 100 yards to over 2000 yards of distance in temps between 10 degrees to over 100 degrees, I have never seen the humidity change a load with pre-loaded ammo. Not once. Nor have I seen it dramatically change trajectory.
In fact, I can run any bullet I like at any speed I like on any one of my six ballistics programs I have at 1% humidity and then change nothing in the inputs except raising the humidity to 100% and the most significant difference I could get was 2.8" at 1000 yards!! Basically that's undetectable in the real world.
Ok, so usually I hear this humidity "problem" with ammo loaded at the range in a non-controlled environment instead of ammo loaded at home in a controlled environment. In fact, I heard about this problem at the first match I ever shot in. Now, being somewhat open minded, and being new to this game at that time, I thought it went against good science but I wasn't about to dispute who said it because he'd been doing this crazy game for many more moons than I.
But, I have heard it many more times since and now I'm actually reading it in print!
So my question to those who find fault with humidity is this:
Since smokeless powder is NOT hygroscopic, and you have an airtight "container" (at least I hope it's airtight) in which to store your powder until it's ignition (your cartridge), how could humidity change anything? I'm curious.
I mean, what do you feel is changing your load? We have oil down our barrels before the first shot is fired, so water in the barrel can't be it. Even if it was, it wouldn't stay in there longer than the first shot anyway.
Our powder throwers aren't airtight but since powder won't absorb moisture in the air, it doesn't need to be. If there is moisture in the drum from condensation, a few charges would probably get rid of it.
The ballistic programs say that moisture in the air isn't appreciably changing the trajectory of the bullet so that can't be it.
Primers have sealant on them and can be immersed in water for days and still fire so that's not it.
Barrels oscillate how they are going to oscillate regardless of water vapor in the air so that can't be it either.
I'm stumped. I just can't see how humidity would affect our loads. I think what is happening is since the humidity is relative to some degree to the temperature change throughout the day, we are really seeing a result of temperature and correlating it with humidity too. I tune my loads throughout the day based on the ambient air temperature alone. Perhaps this is wrong but it seems to be fairly dependable. At least, to the chronograph it is. I can map out what my load does with any lot of powder throughout the days temperature swings and repeat it with pretty scary consistency at will----especially with N133.
Or is it possible that the link between humidity and mirage is causing the "problem". Perhaps the lighter humidity makes it easier for one to read the resulting mirage and therefore judge the correct hold easier. Or maybe it is interfering with parallax adjustments? I don't know.
It is a scientific meteorological fact that higher humidity will stabilize the air temperature better than low humidity so maybe the quicker changing temperature at low humidity is "putting you in the tune" your gun wants faster? I doubt this one though because it would also go past the tune and out of it quicker too so it wouldn't help you for long.
It would seem to me also that if humidity was the culprit, you could simply get a tuner, load all your ammo at home in a controlled environment and then simply adjust the tuner to compensate for humidity changes. But everyone I've talked to that shoots tuners always talks about changing tuner settings because of temperature or powder lots or something else. I've never heard humidity mentioned in regards to a tuner. Maybe some of the "tuner guys" will chime in. I'm curious...........
Well, being a ballistic nut and avid chronographer, I was confused by the "science" of this article. Why? Because in all my years of shooting from 11,000 feet to 2000 feet of elevation and from 100 yards to over 2000 yards of distance in temps between 10 degrees to over 100 degrees, I have never seen the humidity change a load with pre-loaded ammo. Not once. Nor have I seen it dramatically change trajectory.
In fact, I can run any bullet I like at any speed I like on any one of my six ballistics programs I have at 1% humidity and then change nothing in the inputs except raising the humidity to 100% and the most significant difference I could get was 2.8" at 1000 yards!! Basically that's undetectable in the real world.
Ok, so usually I hear this humidity "problem" with ammo loaded at the range in a non-controlled environment instead of ammo loaded at home in a controlled environment. In fact, I heard about this problem at the first match I ever shot in. Now, being somewhat open minded, and being new to this game at that time, I thought it went against good science but I wasn't about to dispute who said it because he'd been doing this crazy game for many more moons than I.
But, I have heard it many more times since and now I'm actually reading it in print!
So my question to those who find fault with humidity is this:
Since smokeless powder is NOT hygroscopic, and you have an airtight "container" (at least I hope it's airtight) in which to store your powder until it's ignition (your cartridge), how could humidity change anything? I'm curious.
I mean, what do you feel is changing your load? We have oil down our barrels before the first shot is fired, so water in the barrel can't be it. Even if it was, it wouldn't stay in there longer than the first shot anyway.
Our powder throwers aren't airtight but since powder won't absorb moisture in the air, it doesn't need to be. If there is moisture in the drum from condensation, a few charges would probably get rid of it.
The ballistic programs say that moisture in the air isn't appreciably changing the trajectory of the bullet so that can't be it.
Primers have sealant on them and can be immersed in water for days and still fire so that's not it.
Barrels oscillate how they are going to oscillate regardless of water vapor in the air so that can't be it either.
I'm stumped. I just can't see how humidity would affect our loads. I think what is happening is since the humidity is relative to some degree to the temperature change throughout the day, we are really seeing a result of temperature and correlating it with humidity too. I tune my loads throughout the day based on the ambient air temperature alone. Perhaps this is wrong but it seems to be fairly dependable. At least, to the chronograph it is. I can map out what my load does with any lot of powder throughout the days temperature swings and repeat it with pretty scary consistency at will----especially with N133.
Or is it possible that the link between humidity and mirage is causing the "problem". Perhaps the lighter humidity makes it easier for one to read the resulting mirage and therefore judge the correct hold easier. Or maybe it is interfering with parallax adjustments? I don't know.
It is a scientific meteorological fact that higher humidity will stabilize the air temperature better than low humidity so maybe the quicker changing temperature at low humidity is "putting you in the tune" your gun wants faster? I doubt this one though because it would also go past the tune and out of it quicker too so it wouldn't help you for long.
It would seem to me also that if humidity was the culprit, you could simply get a tuner, load all your ammo at home in a controlled environment and then simply adjust the tuner to compensate for humidity changes. But everyone I've talked to that shoots tuners always talks about changing tuner settings because of temperature or powder lots or something else. I've never heard humidity mentioned in regards to a tuner. Maybe some of the "tuner guys" will chime in. I'm curious...........