The Vihtavourie reloading manual shows a diagram of this and describes it as an over stabalized bullet.
Who is correct? I would have thought a correctly stabalized bullet would follow its trajectory.
Regards
Ray
Most bullets are over-stabilized. They will travel nose high at extreme ranges as depicted. The nose-high attitude can cause a little bit of lift, but basically the bullet follows the expected trajectory.
Hatcher did an experiment of firing the 30-06 straight up into the air. The bullets usually landed base down and still spinning -in just they same attitude as they left the barrel.
Don
Thanks for the prompt reply.
Can I assume that a correctly stabalized bullet will follow the trajectory. I would have thought this would be beneficial drag wise.
I think the shooting bullets verticaly bit is a red hering as under, over and correctly stabalized bullets will all fall tail first. No disrespect intended.
Regards
Ray
I shoot a little bit on the 1,000 yard range. Key-holing (static stability) is a common situation. Bullets maintain a nose high attitude throughout their flight to the target. The key is addressing twist, bullet mass, and velocity to ensure adequate stability without over stabilizing the bullet. It can be a frustrating process of hide-and-seek.