JerrySharrett
Senile Member
The situation-we have wind flags set up at 25, 50, and 75 yards for a target that is at 100 yards.
To start, the average benchrest bullet is spinning about 185,000 rpm. Do you believe the theory that the wind actually re-aims the axis of rotation of the bullet and thus the wind closest to the bench has more effect on where the bullet impacts? Realizing the wind to re-aim the bullet must push on the side of the bullet. Since the bullet has a larger "footprint" at the back than it does on its point, how does the wind push the bullet nose around?? Why would the wind not push the base more than the point, thus re-aiming the bullet into the wind?
Or, is a bullet like an airplane traveling along that same flight path, in the same air mass, meaning the distance from the last flag to the target has more effect since the bullet is in the segment for a longer period of time since it has slowed down?
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To start, the average benchrest bullet is spinning about 185,000 rpm. Do you believe the theory that the wind actually re-aims the axis of rotation of the bullet and thus the wind closest to the bench has more effect on where the bullet impacts? Realizing the wind to re-aim the bullet must push on the side of the bullet. Since the bullet has a larger "footprint" at the back than it does on its point, how does the wind push the bullet nose around?? Why would the wind not push the base more than the point, thus re-aiming the bullet into the wind?
Or, is a bullet like an airplane traveling along that same flight path, in the same air mass, meaning the distance from the last flag to the target has more effect since the bullet is in the segment for a longer period of time since it has slowed down?
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