So to us hunter's that are mathematically challenged, what does this all mean? MPBR will be extended shooting uphill or downhill me thinks.
Yes, depending on the angle, your MPBR will be extended, possibly by as much as 100% if shooting at 60 degrees.
Now that I read your posts, I must admit there is a flaw in what I have learned theoretically. Of course time of flight allows gravity to act upon an object for a longer time therefore it must drop more....period. I was actually thinking about this after I typed it last night and pondered that flaw in the theory. There is another factor that is not being considered though in sharp downhill long range shooting.........that is the positive effect of gravity on retained velocity. I do not know the mathematics to express this but I do know for a fact it exists and the drop over 1000 mtrs at 78 Deg downhill is not 55". I watched my sheep hunting buddy make this shot, it was actually between 7-800 mtrs downhill with about 150-200 mtrs horizontal component. I was spotting on the scope while he shot. He was shooting my 7 mag with 160 Parts at 3000 fps sighted dead on at 300 mtrs. We had a long discussion about the range and it's effect on the bullet and disagreed as to where to hold. He decided to hold about 6-12 inches over the ram that was bedded out on a little finger and that is exactly where the bullet went. The ram got up and bailed over the edge of the finger and disappeared out of sight, only to return to his bed a couple minutes later, totally confused. My buddy then took my advise and held right on the upper shoulder of the ram and killed it stone dead on the next shot. We were prone and basically benchrested on a ledge so sighting and holding was not an issue. I can say for a fact that the bullet was striking more or less exactly where the cross hair was and the range was definitely approaching the 1/2 mile mark of bullet flight but with only a 150-200 mtr horizontal distance. Again, I do not know how to express this mathematically but I know what I saw and in my mind it follows perfect logic........uphill I'm sketchy about as the opposite principal must exist but I have never taken or witnessed an uphill shot that far or that steep.
I have been racking my brain trying to wrap my head around the totality of the math problem before us. In the end I stopped trying to reinvent the wheel, and googled it.
One thing I can say for certain is the more I read on this subject, the less I actually grasp it.
Found five sources that articulated the math problem five different ways, but in the end they all agreed. If shooting at angles without corrections, your shots will land HIGH. The rule of thumb is when correcting for angle, hold low. So your buddy that held high on his first shot would have made the problem worse.
With respect, not much can be learned from your one shot, unless we can run the numbers on exact range and exact angle. There is a lot of difference between 700m and 800m. From what I just read, again with all due respect, if he did a dead hold for a 800 meter distance to target shot, and hit it, he got lucky.
http://www.exteriorballistics.com/ebexplained/5th/33.cfm
http://thearmsguide.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/uphilldownhill.jpg
http://www.rifleshootermag.com/network-topics/tips-tactics-network/hitting-a-high-or-low-angle-shot/
In a previous post, I used Pythagoras to show how horizontal distance to target actually results in a longer shot than anticipated, resulting in shots landing low. While technically true, this is an utterly useless statement. In fact, it is the exact opposite of the correct way to articulate the problem. Unless you are using a map to estimate horizontal distance, no one estimates distance on a strictly horizontal basis. Apparently though, the actual horizontal distance is what you need to know. This is impossible to estimate reliably because it usually means estimating a distance in the air over your target, if looking down, or estimating a distance to some point underground, if looking up.
Several references talk about finding the actual horizontal distance by measuring line of sight to distance, and applying a formula based on the angle to find the actual horizontal distance.
If you look at the image at the arms guide link, you can see in the horizontal shot, a vertical blank line labelled "bullet drop at level range," or DROP. When shooting horizontal, drop is measured vertically. When shooting up at an angle, you are essentially rotating the entire Line of Sight/Line of Departure equation, meaning your 'drop' is also affected by the angle. Its important to remember, that even when shooting up or down, we are still imagining our DROP as a vertical line.
In the elevated shot shown in that image, you can see the yellow line labelled 'bullet drop at slant angle', you can see that the actual distance of drop is the same as for horizontal, however it is being indicated at a different point in the bullets flight path, a point where the bullet is still above the line of sight, and results in the bullet actually impacted above the sight line.
At the end of the day, as several references have said. It is not important to understand WHY it works, you only need to know HOW it works, and how to apply the correct formula.
I know how good charts for this formula, and look forward to a chance to put in use, apply the formula, hit my target, and still end up scratching my head about why that worked.
This has been an educational experience.