It appears that from multiple sources 45 deg is the angle for maximum range, IF you are shooting on a flat plane of infinite size (no curvature of the earth) and no wind resistance. If you add wind resistance the range changes according to the resistance which seems to change according to altitude, ballistic coefficient of projectile, and velocity. I found this simple and intuitive explanation:
The "terminal range" problem is one I've looked at in some detail. In a
nutshell, here's the underlying physics.
45° is the optimum angle for maximum range only when air drag isn't a factor
-- e.g., in a vacuum. As air drag increases, the optimum angle decreases.
For artillery shells, it's typically ~40°. For rifle bullets (as you say)
~30°. For airgun pellets, it's ~20° and even less.
The reason for this effect is evident when you consider the respective roles
of the two components (i.e., horizontal and vertical) in contributing to
range. It's the horizontal component that actually covers "ground." The
contribution of the vertical component is only in determining the time that
the projectile is in the air. When free-fall is the only factor determining
the time of flight, then the optimum partition of kinetic energy between
horiz. and vertical components is 50:50 -- i.e. a 45° elevation angle.
But as air drag becomes more and more important, then a larger fraction of
the time of flight is contributed by the slowing of the projectiles fall by
drag -- and is therefore independent of the initial vertical velocity
component.
This works out to mean that as air drag increases, more range is to be had
by allocating a bigger and bigger fraction of MV to the horizontal component
and less and less to the vertical -- which is equivalent to sayiing that the
optimum elevation angle gets lower and lower.
Here's a handy table parameterized in terms of ballistic coefficient -- a
measure of the ratio of mass to drag:
BC = infinity : OA = 45°
--------- 2.0 ------ 42°
--------- 1.0 ------ 40°
---------- .75 ----- 39°
---------- .5 ------ 37°
---------- .25 ----- 34°
---------- .1 ------ 29°
---------- .05 ----- 25°
---------- .025 ---- 22°
---------- .02 ----- 20°
---------- .015 ---- 19°
---------- .01 ----- 17°
---------- .005 ---- 14°
Here:
http://www.luchtbuks.net/index.php?s=1494aeee8715d26e4e682fb3848b7bcd&showtopic=482&st=0&p=3530&#entry3530It's not in english.
So it looks like MAXIMUM range will always be 45 deg or less, how much less is too much trouble to figure out!
Thx
MikeR C