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#151 |
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Join Date: September 28, 2013
Posts: 4,854
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Given bullet's BC and target distance, there exists optimum MV for minimum wind deflection.
I didn't realize that till I read an article on airgun pellet. The article gave brief qualitative explanations, but no analytical equations. I tried it on ballistic calculator. It is true. Wind deflection drops with increased MV till it reaches a minimum, and then it goes the other way. Speed doesn't always improve "wind bucking", BC always does. That's interesting. I will post a link to the article later. Will dig out the Robert McCoy book too to try to derive an analytical solution. -TL Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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#152 | |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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Quote:
Area for wind to push against, constant, right? Time wind has to push against the bullet is variable with the velocity. Right?? Faster means less time of flight, so less time for wind to push, so less deflection, Right?? SO, once you reach the minimum amount of deflection, how would further reducing the time of flight by increasing velocity, increase the amount of wind deflection?? I don't get how that could happen.
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#153 | |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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Borrowed this from the Pilots of America forum--italics and color are added by me.
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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#154 |
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Tailwind and headwind effects on aircraft doesn't seem to be well related to wind deflection (wind from the side /at an angle drifting a bullet).
Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't aircraft have to alter the positions of their control surfaces to counter the effect of wind from the side, below, or above? A bullet can't do that.
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All else being equal (and it almost never is) bigger bullets tend to work better. |
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#155 | |
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Join Date: September 28, 2013
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Quote:
TOF decreases with MV. As stated by unclenick's posts in the thread, the origin of the sideways force is the drag. The drag increases as the MV. Above certain MV, the 2nd factor becomes dominant, so the wind deflection comes back up. This phenomenon happens with low BC projectiles. Airgun pellet has low BC (<0.05), so it is more noticeable. But I wouldn't be surprised light varmint bullets at super high MV have the issue. -TL Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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#156 | |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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Quote:
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! Last edited by stagpanther; January 17, 2024 at 04:36 AM. |
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#157 |
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Join Date: March 4, 2005
Location: Ohio
Posts: 21,582
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Bullets don't get pushed or drifted by wind. "Wind drift" is a misnomer maintained out of historical habit. It is what F. W. Mann tried unsuccessfully to demonstrate, likening the bullet's flight through air to a boat drifting downstream or a leaf tossed on the wind. But the numbers don't add up. Even a boat placed in a running stream or a leaf released by a tree don't instantly start moving at the speed of the flowing fluid they find themselves dropped into. First, the motion of the fluid exerts drag on the item in question, and that force starts overcoming it's static inertia and moving it. As it picks up speed, the difference between its speed and that of the fluid diminishes, so the drag force drops off, so the acceleration drops off, and the object's speed closes in on the fluid speed more and more gradually as it gets closer to it. This continues until any difference in the two speeds is lost in the noise and the two appear to be moving together. In the time of flight of a bullet, it can account only for a small fraction of the actual bullet deflection from its zero wind POI (as I showed by calculation for a 22 LR in the attachment to one of my earlier posts on page 3 or 4, IIRC).
At any rate, the official correct physics term is wind deflection, even though we keep calling it wind drift. The same is true of spin drift, which is actually a deflection caused by the yaw of repose slightly favoring one side in deflecting the bullet's headwind off the ogive of the bullet nose.
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#158 | |
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Quote:
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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#159 |
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Location: Ohio
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If even F. W. Mann couldn't get past "wind drift", you have nothing to apologize for.
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#160 | |
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Quote:
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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#161 | |
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Join Date: January 13, 2018
Posts: 1,520
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Quote:
Great explanation in this book: https://www.kevinkoperski.com/post/stick-rudder/ |
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#162 |
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Join Date: June 17, 2010
Location: Virginia
Posts: 7,163
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Anyone who's had to hold hard rudder & aileron landing into a strong crosswind . . . .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NglxhkfP1ds&t=409s ![]() |
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#163 |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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For all airspeeds there is an associated angle of attack to the apparent wind at which an aircraft can be stalled. In the past few months commercial airliners have been able to exceed 700 or more mph indicated groundspeed over the US and when transiting the pond; nobody is breaking the sound barrier. Friend of mine just posted this yesterday doing a regional flight over the US.
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! Last edited by stagpanther; January 20, 2024 at 03:43 AM. |
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#164 |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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I'll just drop this right here...
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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#165 |
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Join Date: June 17, 2010
Location: Virginia
Posts: 7,163
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I think we now have the epitome of
"circular arguments at cross purposes" ![]() . Last edited by mehavey; January 20, 2024 at 09:26 AM. |
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#166 |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
Posts: 12,692
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What? You don't like my drawing? I am an artist you know.
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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#167 | |
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Join Date: January 13, 2018
Posts: 1,520
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Quote:
There are quite a few terms confused and convoluted to obscure a very simple truth. "the aircraft does not feel the wind". Consequently, a bullet does not feel it either. However, the airmass is moving and we will perceive the "wind drift" when our frame of reference is two stationary points on the ground that are NOT moving in the airmass. Convoluting separate concepts of turbulence at airmass shear does not help illustrate that fact of physics. Even in turbulence, an airfoil maintains a constant air density as it only produces the lift required. We perceive that maintenance of constant air density as movement about the CG and because our frame of reference is seperate in not being attached to the aircraft...we feel the acceleration. Last edited by davidsog; January 20, 2024 at 02:47 PM. |
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#168 | |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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Quote:
I'm not arguing the drift vs push thing--what I'm pointing out is that in general where there's wind, there's turbulence, especially near the ground. Of the three sources of disturbed airflow I show in my crude drawing above (there are others, like downdrafts/catabatic winds) chances are very high you're going to be exposed to at least one of them while shooting from the ground.
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! Last edited by stagpanther; January 20, 2024 at 04:19 PM. |
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#169 |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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When sideways (off centerline axis) pressure is applied, aircraft and boats "skid". They get moved off course. SO do bullets. Aircraft and water craft have control systems to compensate for that. Bullets do not.
Can we agree on that? Car's tires have traction, which "anchors" them to the ground more firmly than boats in the water or airplanes in flight, they don't drift as much, but you can feel your car being rocked by a gust of sideways wind, so its obvious the pressure is there. A bullet cannot compensate for sideways force the way a steerable vehicle can. So only the shape, surface area and speed are factors in how much drift from a given "push" the bullet undergoes. It was stated that as the bullet goes faster the effect of "wind drift" goes down, (meaning the amount of off axis movement is reduced) and that makes sense to me. However, it was also stated that when a bullet goes faster than the point where minimum drift happens, the amount of drift goes back up, and that I cannot figure out. Still hoping someone more skilled in this matter can explain it to me in a way I can grasp. Thanks.
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All else being equal (and it almost never is) bigger bullets tend to work better. |
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#170 | |
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Join Date: March 2, 2014
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Quote:
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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#171 | |||
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Join Date: January 13, 2018
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Quote:
p = Density q = 1/2 * p * V^2 L = Lift = weight in steady state flight = constant S = Lifting Surface Area = constant When an aircraft moves thru the airmass it must maintain that constant density to remain in flight. When that density changes due to a change in air mass velocity at the shear..... The density remains constant from the aircrafts FRAME OF REFERENCE as the aircraft will remain at a constant density. YOUR Frame of Reference is not the aircrafts and because you are not in that same Frame of Reference you will feel it as motion as the aircraft keeps that same density. Quote:
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#172 | |
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Join Date: September 28, 2013
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Quote:
-TL Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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#173 |
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Join Date: February 12, 2001
Location: DFW Area
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I don't think that's an explanation that provides any sort of intuitive insight. I suspect he's looking for answers to these questions that will provide an intuitive grasp of the situation.
Drag always goes up with velocity, so it's not simply a matter of drag increasing. WHY does the increased drag, even with lower TOF result in more POI change due to wind? Intuitively, with a shorter time for the wind to operate on the bullet, one thinks it should move less. What effect is resulting in more POI change due to wind even though the wind is the same and has less time to operate on the projectile? You mention that this doesn't happen all the time. What are the specific circumstances under which increasing velocity also increases POI change due to wind and how do those circumstances result in this effect?
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#174 | |
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Join Date: January 13, 2018
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Quote:
There is a fundamental misunderstanding in the term "Wind Shear". There seems to be some belief that turbulence is wind shear. It is not. Wind shear is a very isolated phenomenon that occurs between airmass in only four situations. Turbulence occurs in all airmasses. We feel turbulence because we are not physically a part of the aircraft. That is why they tell you to remain seated with your seat belt buckled when experiencing it. Wind shear is a very different animal. In order for your bullet to experience Wind Shear effects it would have cross gust front of a Thunderstorm and the wind shift line between airmasses. They convergence of those two things MIGHT create a shear. Mostly it will just make turbulence. The other conditions for Wind Shear are simply not something you would ever experience on a rifle range as they occur at altitude. |
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#175 | |
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Join Date: September 28, 2013
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Quote:
With high speed and low BC, the drag force increase, so does the force that move the projectile sideways. If the reduced TOF can't offset the effect of the increased force, wind deflection comes back up. I will dig up the McCoy book to get a analytical solution when I have a chance. For now just try this on a ballistics calculator. Keep increasing MV and observing the change in wind deflection. -TL Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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