Wind Drift?

rcmark

New member
Quote from this link:
http://gunsmagazine.com/varmint-rifle-trends/

"There’s also a fairly common belief that the .17 Hornady Magnum Rimfire’s bullets drift more in the wind than the heavier bullets of the .22 Magnum, but this simply isn’t true, as anybody who shoots both cartridges much will discover. In fact most .22 Magnum bullets drift as much as .22 Long Rifle bullets, and .17 HMR bullets drift about half as much."

So would the .17 hornet have less drift than the .17 hmr?

Anyone seen a 'wind drift / cal. chart'?
 
Wind drift has to do with velocity, BC, and distance interacting with a crosswind. So it is entirely possible that a 22 magnum would have less wind drift at shorter ranges because of velocity and bullet momentum, but more wind drift at longer ranges where the fatter bullet has slowed more than the 17 cal bullet.

Between Berger and Sierra neither can agree if crosswinds push the bullet nose upwind or downwind. Both have ballistic models that work though, so the mechanics are pretty irrelevant from a shooter perspective.

Jimro
 
...and the bullet will drift even the complete absence of any cross flow at all. That affect is increased as the angle between the axis of bullet rotation and the velocity vector of the bullet increases (a function of flight time), and decreased (not necessarily in equal measure) as the bullet airspeed decreases (also a function of flight time). :)
 
New info:

Ammo Source: Hornady ballistics calculator

Wind Drift
10 mph at 90°
300 yards

Hornady 17 HMR V-Max 17GR. 39.1

Hornady 17 Hornet 25 gr HP 15.1

Hornady 17 Hornet 20 gr V-MAX 13.8

Hornady 17 Hornet 15 gr V-MAX 24.5

Hornady .223 55 Grain V-Max 10.9

Hornady .223 53 Grain V-Max Superformance 8.6

Federal Gold Medal 223 Rem 69 gr. MatchKing 10.3

Ruger 204 Hornady 32 gr V-Max Superformance 10.4

Ruger 204 Hornady 40 gr V-Max Superformance 7.9
 
Bongoboy is correct. He is describing what we used to call "Bullet whip". That is why at different yardage your point of impact varies. The Marines used a "Dope sheet" to compensate.
 
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