Originally Posted By: Jabey9210i tried to quote but messed it up!!!!
++++++1 Cat A lot of people believe especially with berger and other VLD's that it takes time for them to stabilize. There is no way any bullet is more accurate down range than at the muzzle especially due to wind, pressure, coriolis and other atmoshperic conditions. If people are more accurate at 200 yards than they are at 100 yards they should try to turn there magnification down at 100 yrds if they have a 20 power scope turned all the way up at 200 yards if they shoot at 100 yards with it turned down to 10 power they will find their groups will shrink up. I don't know how to explain it in words but try it it really does work and if the bullet is spinning 1 rev per 9 inches it will continue to spin once every 9 inches until it hits the target or the ground yes the revolution slows down but so does the velocity even though it takes the bullet longer in time to rotate it also takes it longer in time to travel the 9 inches and will continue to rotate once every nine inches.
Jabey. To quote a post, just klicky on the "Quote" button, next to the reply button (it is the second one from the left, under the post you want to quote. then ad your text where ever you want.
You can preview your post by hitting the "preview post" button - you will see what your post will look like - it appears below the box you are typing in.
The garbage that people believe just astonishes me. But they read it and believe it, without asking the author to explain (in real words) what they are saying.
People read garbage that makes no sense and just believe it without thinking about it.
And some of this stuff is so off the wall, that if you stop and think about the logic of it for 5 minutes, you double up laughing.
---
The bullet looses velocity fairly fast at first - as it slows down, it looses velocity at a slower rate, until it reaches a point where it is "almost" not loosing velocity, and it crashes into the ground (and then looses all of it's velocity at once).
The rotational spin does NOT decrease at the same rate, because the rotational drag is non-existant in the early stages of flight, which is exactly when the forward drag is highest.
Far down range (very far), the forward drag is much less, but because the bullet is now falling sideways, AND the air flow over the body now involves the rifling groves (which it does not in the early phases of flight), the rotational drag increases. So the rotational decrease is NEVER in sync with the forwards decrease in velocity.
Never ever.
A bullet that is shot from a 9" twist... has it's forward and rotational velocities out of sync within feet of the muzzle.