I never really thought about it that way, the load I have with retumbo that was shooting 30 fps different on the Chrony is accurate, I shot it at 600yards at the range a couple weeks ago, the results were excellent. Vertical spread was negligible to my surprise! The 3 shiny dots at the bottom were the last 3 and the 2 at the middle right were my first shots (I moved so I could see where I was hitting easier)
[/IMG]
If the Chrony has a rated 0.5% error rate, and I do believe that is fair, +/-15fps is within the design parameters of the device.
Seeing 30fps difference in numbers on a 3000fps muzzle velocity means all those numbers are the "same" as defined by the device.
ie 2985 and 3000 and 3015 IS the same number as it relates to error.
Many forget that all measuring devices have some level of error so the output value has to be taken with that context.
The correct way of calculating SD's and ES's with these devices is to include the error range with EVERY value instead of using the output value as an absolute. Very quickly you will find that the values including error overlap to the point where the math becomes pointless.
There is a bunch of math/stat mumbo jumbo about degrees of certainty, etc but the only thing that matters in this game is holes in paper.
If bullets land with 1" vertical at 600yds, I am going to call that load smoking awesome and couldn't care less what an LED readout tells me... except that it gave me enough info to dial a scope to hit paper.
One last point just to give something to chew on over coffee.....
Let's assume, we have some super duber accurate Olympic quality atom clock chronie that can measure accurately to the +/- 2fps. We tune out loads and we get output speeds to within a TRUE single digit spread.
Will that chronie account for changes in aerodynamic drag of the bullet due to variations in the bullet shape? Or Twist Rate?
Holes in paper, tends to simply the math alot....
Jerry