75 yards for most calibers .243" +I haven't gathered the data to try that for myself.
I recall the labradar I used would stop capturing velocity somewhere before 100m.
this is ok75 yards for most calibers .243" +
I did a 30 round string with a 223 this afternoon. 19.1 SD using sample , 18.8 SD using population......
Yes!remember kids: 30 rounds is a good sample; 5 is not
this is ok
30 rounds is a good sample
try 3 or 5 rounds (which is the usual sample) and see the difference
by the formula, for 4 shots, the sample/population = 1.154 (15.4%)SD off the first 4 shots :
Sample : 21.6 fps
Population : 18.7 fps
So here's a chart of the data:I had always just assumed that the skew would be 0. So now I'll get some more chronograph data (from my brand-new Labradar LX) and start charting and calculating. Unless you already have enough data to share?
Mean: | 2771.642 |
SD: | 13.12501 |
Skew: | 0.071484 |
Kurtosis: | -0.10632 |
Indeed, the difference becomes insignificant on really large samples.Lets get something straight, the thread title is misleading, Garmin doesn't get the SD wrong, it gets it differently. A person in statisicts would tell you the difference is statistically insignificant. This thread is akin of how many spirits can dance on the head of a pin, or what kills faster, .308 or .30-06. It is all a matter of opinion. Over 40 years ago when I used to compete in 1000yrd matches in the US there weren't a lot of chronographs around, SD and ES meant little. We worked up a good load and learned to dope the wind etc and sometimes were rewarded with an 8" group at that distance - how did we ever achieve that without knowing each fired rounds and future rounds SD.......
this is ok
30 rounds is a good sample
try 3 or 5 rounds (which is the usual sample) and see the difference
You mean the difference becomes insignificant on meaningful sample sizes. Everyone who knows anything about statistics knows a sample size of 3-5 is only useful if your population is very small - which is not the case for a firearm that is good for thousands of rounds.Indeed, the difference becomes insignificant on really large samples.
but for the usual 3 or 5 shot samples, the difference is 22% and respectively 12%
I wish for a 12% pay increase...
like Tom Morrison said it, it looks like a marketing move
yes Suther you are right on all points.You mean the difference becomes insignificant on meaningful sample sizes. Everyone who knows anything about statistics knows a sample size of 3-5 is only useful if your population is very small - which is not the case for a firearm that is good for thousands of rounds.
If you know enough to argue which SD to use, and you're still using 5 shots to determine your SD, that's a user problem not a device problem IMO.
Garmin could have used the correct method and didn't. Where it would matter is ELR shooting when trying to figure out hit percentages, or just for correctness in general.[Garmin explanation]
Most people aren't ELR shooters though.Garmin could have used the correct method and didn't. Where it would matter is ELR shooting when trying to figure out hit percentages, or just for correctness in general.
As legi0n says, most people only do a few shots and take the SD from there.
I'll quote myself: "Garmin could have used the correct method and didn't." And some people are ELR or just LR - these are the people who disproportionally buy chronographs.Most people aren't ELR shooters though.