Gene,
Sorry to disappoint you, but no, I am not a pilot. I am merely a student of the rifle. I am fortunate to have a husband that is an experienced long-range competitive shooter, former marine shooting instructor, and also a student of the rifle.
Along with that, my husband and I are privileged to travel in a circle that includes a single in-law with post-graduate degrees in chemistry, physics, and mathematics; a fixed-wing Naval Aviator (Marine F/A-18’s), with a degree in aeronautical engineering; a rotary-wing Naval Aviator (Marine CH-46’s) with a degree in mechanical engineering; and a retired US Navy Master Chief that was at one time the NCOIC of the Great Lakes Naval Gunfire School (back when the “fire control computer” was a slide rule, a wind sock, and an abacus) that spent the better part of 35 years as a gunner on destroyers.
When a discussion of “how a bullet flies” comes up around these guys you’d better hang on and have the rest of the afternoon available.
When I first showed an interest in rifle shooting, my husband (who is a wonderful teacher) made it plain that he would teach me everything he knew, and lots of things he thought about the accurate rifle and the precision shot. That was the catch. I HAD TO LEARN about shooting. Not just go to the range and yank the trigger.
He taught me what he knew about internal ballistics, and we researched more, going over new or different ideas as they were presented so that I had a thourough understanding of the mechanics of initiating the shot to preceed my introduction to reloading.
We debated contrasting sides of all of the aspects of exterior ballistics, studying the views and opinions of all the different “experts”. In many cases, we experiment (as best we can) with the varying concepts that are floating around out there. We keep what works and reject the rest.
I have spent countless hours discussing things like wind “deflection” (whatever that really is), sectional density, ballistic coefficient, and what happens if you fire a bullet in the absence of gravity—more on that in a minute—at the dinner table and at fine restaurants all over the country in the company of some (if not all) of the people mentioned above.
Like I said: if you want a “lively discussion” on how a bullet flies, get a physicist, an aeronautical engineer, a naval gunfire expert, and marine rifle team member together at the same table. Just hold on and order more than one cocktail.
Some of that is bound to rub off. Even a blind pig will find some truffles.
Caution—At this point I am oversimplifying—Caution
Mostly, what I believe on the issue of bullet flight is this: Everyone gets caught up in the “what would happen in a vacuum” vs. “what happens in the atmosphere” debate.
I think most of the discussion would become easier to understand if we debated “WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IN THE ABSENCE OF GRAVITY”. With the absence of gravity, but not in a vacuum, all of the forces that affect the bullet are present; the bullet just never falls to the ground.
What happens if a bullet is fired in the absence of gravity? If it is fired on a level plane, it will continue to travel dead ahead (wind, the coriolis, magnus, and other forces excluded for the moment) until its forward momentum stops. If nothing else acts on the bullet except the drag created by coasting through the atmosphere, the bullet will continue to travel unimpeded and continue to bleed velocity until it comes to a dead stop, where is will just hang there as the earth rotates out from under it.
Likewise, it will ALWAYS bleed velocity directly opposite the drag (I know, it is really in the direction of drag, but it is easier to think of it as opposite).
If we impart a 90 degree crosswind on this bullet (in the absence of gravity) as it is flying along, it will precess (pointing its nose into the crosswind) and, as it bleeds velocity directly opposite its drag, it will slow down in the opposite direction of its nose. This is what most people refer to a “wind drift”. As the bullets’ velocity approaches the velocity of the crosswind the bullet will precess further and further into the wind. When the forward velocity is the same as the crosswind, the bullet will precess at a 45 degree angle to both the wind and original direction of travel. When the forward velocity decreases to zero, and if the crosswind is still blowing, the bullet will precess directly into the crosswind (or be completely sideways to the bore). Eventually, the wind would start pushing the bullet backwards. In other words, pushing the bullet ass backwards accelerating the bullet until it reached a speed equal to the wind velocity.
This is why, if a bullet is fired from one balloon moving in an air mass, at a target fixed to another balloon traveling in the same air mass, the bullet will still exhibit “wind drift”. It is this precession, and the corresponding velocity loss in the opposite direction of drag that causes the bullet to “drift”.
This is why a fired bullet and a bullet dropped from sufficient height to achieve terminal velocity do not exhibit the same amount of “wind drift”.
Anyway, that’s what I think.
Lisa