So I just finished watching this documentary on famous snipers and some of their memorable shots. It was interesting to watch although something said at the end bugged me, so I watched it a few more times just to make sure I heard it right. Feel free to watch the whole thing but the part i'm asking about starts around the 1:28:30 mark.
Basically Ryan Mcmillan is trying to recreate Rob Furlong's record shot and fails, he then explains that a big problem their having has to do with wind, and then he seems to make a general statement that wind at the muzzle has more effect on a bullet then wind at the target. Wouldn't the opposite be true? Since the bullet is losing velocity wind downrange has more time to act on it than at the muzzle, right? The guy is a former sniper and i'm fairly new to external ballistics, so I thought id ask so I stop thinking about it.
[youtube]FhP1aZNqM3Y[/youtube]
Basically Ryan Mcmillan is trying to recreate Rob Furlong's record shot and fails, he then explains that a big problem their having has to do with wind, and then he seems to make a general statement that wind at the muzzle has more effect on a bullet then wind at the target. Wouldn't the opposite be true? Since the bullet is losing velocity wind downrange has more time to act on it than at the muzzle, right? The guy is a former sniper and i'm fairly new to external ballistics, so I thought id ask so I stop thinking about it.
[youtube]FhP1aZNqM3Y[/youtube]