Author Topic: Wind Drift?  (Read 1205 times)

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Offline Sharpsman

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Wind Drift?
« on: March 28, 2003, 02:22:50 PM »
What....in your opinion causes bullets to drift in the wind? :roll:  :roll:

Offline Lead pot

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Wind Drift?
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2003, 04:35:27 PM »
Sharpsman :D
I dont know.I think the sonic tail has a lot to do with it,I'm sure it has.Lp.
Dont go were the path leads,go were there is no path and leave a trail.

Offline crashresidue

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drift
« Reply #2 on: March 28, 2003, 09:01:09 PM »
Cheers,

Just like an aircraft - the bullet "lives" in the "relative wind" - that's the air mass it's passing through.  If the relative wind is moving - then , just like an aircraft - it will "drift" with the wind.

Granted, the velocity of the bullet is impressive - but the "relative wind" is something that doesn't care.  It's moves when and where it wants.  And it will "drag" the bullet off by just a little bit in the direction the wind is moving.

cr
When all else fails, call for the gunships!

Offline Sharpsman

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Wind Drift!
« Reply #3 on: March 29, 2003, 09:44:27 AM »
This is the analysis that I have been attempting to generate here:

"First Thought: Most shooters think that wind drift is caused by the wind impacting on the side of the bullet and thus applies a force that pushes the bullet downwind.  That idea is incorrect for a spin stabilized, statically unstable projectile i.e. bullets we fire from our rifles that have a gyroscopic stability factor greater than 1.  If that is how you thought of wind drift then eliminate that thought from your mind because it is just plain wrong at any velocity or Mach number, for any bullet caliber, nose shape or base shape, whether there are grease rings, cannelures, or not, deep or shallow rifling marks, jacket surface roughness or any combination of those characteristics  of a bullet that the human mind can think of.

Second Thought:  Wind drift is caused by the air drag force on the bullet.  It is that simple.  That might or might not sound strange but it is absolutely correct.  I know many of you know the shape of the drag coefficient curves versus Mach number.  At high Mach numbers for centerfire rifles, say Mach 4, the drag coefficient, Cd, increases slowly as the Mach number is reduced.  As the Mach number approaches 1, Cd increases more rapidly until it reaches a maximum just above Mach 1.  As the Mach number decreases further, Cd drops off a cliff decreasing rapidly to about Mach 0.8 to 0.6 where is levels off.  The drag force is equal to bullet velocity squared times Cd.  Thus you can see that the force that causes wind drift will decrease dramatically as Mach number drops below 1.

So how does the drag force cause wind drift?  A bullet is a gyroscope and when it exits the barrel into a cross wind flow the wind initially is impacting the bullet from a slight angle off the direction the bullet is heading.  That creates a moment that the gyroscope resists by turning its long axis parallel to the oncoming air flow.  If you are firing a bullet at 900 f/s and there is a wind of 30 f/s from 9:00 o'clock then from the bullets point of view the air flow is coming from a direction just 1.91 degrees from the left of the centerline of the bore axis.  Thus the bullets long axis turns 1.91 degrees to the left fairly quickly while its center of gravity is moving straight ahead initially.  The air flow is parallel to the long axis of the bullet and there is no air impact on the side of the bullet.  Now, say the drag force on the bullet at one instant is 1 pound.  The 1 pound force is acting point on to the bullet thus it is acting at an angle of 1.91 degrees from the direction the bullet center of gravity is traveling.  Thus the wind drift force is the component of the drag force acting normal to the direction the bullet is traveling.  Thus the wind drift force is tan(1.91 deg.)x1 lb. = 0.033 pounds.  Now the wind drift force is constantly changing because the drag force is constantly changing and the angle the long axis of the bullet is pointing is constantly changing.

If any of you are pilots you know if you are flying east and there is a prevailing wind from the northeast, the attitude of your plane is slightly to the north of east but you are actually traveling east.  It is the same situation for a bullet but in the case of the airplane the thrust is exactly equal to the drag and thus there is no wind drift.  In the case of a fin stabilized rocket the same thing happens.  The fins cause the rocket to turn such that the air flow is parallel to the long axis of the rocket but in the case of rockets the thrust is normally greater than drag and a negative wind drift occurs.  That is........ the rocket drifts into the wind." :D  :grin:

Offline crashresidue

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wind drift
« Reply #4 on: March 30, 2003, 10:06:37 PM »
Cheers,

I'm REALLY confused now!

I've shot tons of "FFAR's" (folding fin aerial rockets)in my time and yes, they all "tracked" into the prevailing wind.  

So, if what you're saying is true - a wind from the left should make the bullet track to the left since that is the prevailing wind?  Correct?

Like I said - I'm REALLY confused - is this what your post said, or am I just too brain dead to have understood it?

Thanks and gentle winds,
cr
When all else fails, call for the gunships!

Offline Roy Cobb

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Wind Drift?
« Reply #5 on: April 01, 2003, 01:53:20 PM »
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Offline Roy Cobb

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Wind Drift?
« Reply #6 on: April 01, 2003, 02:10:53 PM »
One thought that prevails often is that the wind at the target has the most effect on the path of the Bullet this also is untrue the most effect is in the first fifty yards and a tiny movement is exagerated out at 800-1000 but a heavy bullet traveling under Supersonic will show less effect than a light  bullet traveling at "Ludicrous Speed" ask a palma shooter about the wind.
Compared to the High Power shooter with a heavy long bullet optimized for the rifling twist.

Offline Sharpsman

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Wind drift!
« Reply #7 on: April 04, 2003, 02:33:55 PM »
crashresidue

<<<Wind drift is caused by the air drag force on the bullet. It is that simple. >>>

Read my post over again; you'll eventually understand!

Offline Sharpsman

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Wind Drift?
« Reply #8 on: April 04, 2003, 02:40:14 PM »
Quote from: Roy Cobb
One thought that prevails often is that the wind at the target has the most effect on the path of the Bullet this also is untrue the most effect is in the first fifty yards and a tiny movement is exagerated out at 800-1000 but a heavy bullet traveling under Supersonic will show less effect than a light  bullet traveling at "Ludicrous Speed" ask a palma shooter about the wind.
Compared to the High Power shooter with a heavy long bullet optimized for the rifling twist.


I've shot Palma for 45 years! I KNOW what you're talking about! It's very difficult to explain to people whom have shot nothing but high-speed super-sonic bullets that THEY ARE NOT shooting the most efficient bullet....but that is truly the case! I discovered when I first started shooting BPCR long-range that these heavy 550 grain bullets DO NOT have the same characteristics of drift that light weight .30 caliber bullets do! But.....you'd literally have to beat these other shooters over the head before one made this sink in!! One thing that I have discovered though is that the amount of precession is greater with the long and heavy cast bullets but once that is compensated for........back up....cause the amount of drift characteristics is certainly not the same!!

HOLD HARD & STAY CENTER!

Offline Roy Cobb

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Wind Drift?
« Reply #9 on: April 04, 2003, 05:14:56 PM »
Yup The Palma with that little Light weight 30 there is a lot of wind effect isn't there?
I shoot High Power with 300 Win Mag and 220 MK a lot less effect.

The Sharps Bullet I have been shooting is a 525 Swaged Spitzer (modified)

and the wind is a LOT less noticable but the Bullet sure flies a lot farther to get there! "Somewhere Over the rainbow"  8)

Offline Sharpsman

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Wind Drift
« Reply #10 on: April 05, 2003, 02:13:45 AM »
Roy Cobb

If you've got a photo of the 525 gr. "morTIFIED" bullet.....I'd sure like to take a gander at it! Do ya have a digital camera??

Thanks!

I don't think I'd want less than a 550 gr. but it's no problem increasing the weight when swaging. Being as how it's "swaged" are we talking PP here?

Here's a 650 grainer that I shoot in my .50 Sharps! Shoots great!

http://photos.yahoo.com/bc/mulhernric800/vwp?.dir=/BPCR+SHOOTING+RELOADING&.src=ph&.dnm=Brooks+Bullet.jpg&.view=t&.done=http%3a//photos.yahoo.com/bc/mulhernric800/lst%3f%26.dir=/BPCR%2bSHOOTING%2bRELOADING%26.src=ph%26.view=t

Offline Roy Cobb

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Wind Drift?
« Reply #11 on: April 05, 2003, 04:30:25 PM »
Will work on getting you a pic but the digital is wondering around somewhere without me.....

It is swaged but no it is not PP I can't seem to get those right.....

I believe these guys are cast not truly a swaged bullet as in not made from Lead wire.....