Sorry, no.jliston48 wrote:...David N's posting on wind deflection contradicts my understanding of vectors. Surely the wind deflection on a moving body is proportional to the period of time it is exposed to the wind so a slower body would be deflected more than a faster one.
Wind drift and time of flight are not related, not at all. In the higher velocity ranges, they track each other and thus seem related but that's only true once you get above about 2300 feet per second.
Wind drift is a function of the rate of velocity loss. Transonic buffeting of the projectile starts kicking in at about 900 feet per second. That buffeting starts to make the projectile shed velocity more quickly than at lower speeds. This effect gets worse and worse well past the speed of sound, up to about 1400 feet per second. It then starts to taper off but isn't completely gone until about 2300 feet per second.
Thus, a projectile launched at 875 feet per second will drift a certain amount over a certain distance in a certain crosswind. Keep conditions the same and increase the speed of the projectile. Wind drift will get worse (sometimes, depending on the shooting sport, much worse) up to about 1400 feet per second. Once you get the projectile up to about 2300 feet per second, the wind drift figures will fall back to about where they were at 875.
At even higher velocities, the bullet completely outruns all transonic buffeting and it appears that time of flight and wind drift track perfectly with each other. Thus, many centerfire rifle shooters who never shoot anything at low velocities, when they are exposed to the whole concept that longer time of flight can equal less drift, find the whole idea so counterintuitive that they dismiss it. That's one reason that high-power rifle shooters have such problems at extended range. If you've ever talked to long range riflemen who use most modern cartridges, they'll often attest to the fact that the jump from 600 yards to 800 yards is no big deal. However, going from 800 to 900 is much worse and going from 900 to 1000, things just seem to go to hell. The reason is because their bullets, even though they are staying nominally supersonic, are dropping into that 1700-1400 feet per second range where wind drift just seems to whack your performance so much harder than it should. In many real world cases, bullets fired from high-power rifles will drift more in the wind between 800 and 1000 yards than they did all the way from the muzzle to 800.
Take any projectile and plug it into any ballistics computer program. (Here's a commonly used one: http://www.jbmballistics.com/cgi-bin/jbmtraj-5.1.cgi ) Check the wind drift in 100 feet per second intervals from 900 to 2300. It seems weird but it's well documented.
The only people that seem to be aware of it, as groups, are black powder cartridge rifle shooters and pistol silhouette shooters. Both those groups of competitors shoot firearms that force them to deal with those velocity ranges and both groups tend to curse the laws of physics with some regularity.
If someone could recommend some brands/types of .22LR that clock 850-900 feet per second out of a pistol-length barrel, I'd be interested. Even the "sub-sonic" stuff that I've tried runs too fast (according to published specs) to *truly* minimize wind drift. (Edited to add - I really need to break out one of my chronographs and do some testing. If the velocities on the boxes are from testing in rifles, there may be any number of types of ammo out there that shoot close to the ideal for fighting the wind, i.e. ~875 feet per second. I just don't have a place where I can set up a chrono right now.)
As an aside, I have seriously considered building a silhouette pistol with an extremely fast-twist barrel specifically to use that Aguila SSS .22LR ammunition that uses 60-grain bullets. The velocity should be right for cheating the wind and the extra bullet weight would make them suitable for knocking down field pistol targets. I wonder if anyone has ever experimented with the stuff in a re-barreled free pistol? After all, Pac-Nor does make 1-in-6" twist barrel blanks for .22 rimfire. Just a thought...