No. The curves are not actual drops, he used a ballistic calculator to determine the different drops due to velocity spread alone. As such, he would have to have put in a zero distance for each different calculation. That is why they all intersect at one point.
If the lines on the graph are supposed to show the trajectories of the slowest, fastest, and average rounds as they zero on 200 yards, is it possible for any of these rounds to have a maximum height of only six inches above the line of sight, as shown in the graph? Ballistics calculators show .22LR rounds zeroed at 200 yards in the velocity range allegedly in question will have an apogee (maximum height above the line of sight) closer to 19 - 20.5 inches.
Further, if the zero distance is 200 yards, the greatest distance shown in the graph would appear to be at least 300 yards. At that distance, .22LR rounds with an MV in the range in question would drop 67 to 71 inches.
Does the chart shown in the video (reproduced above) have anything to do with shooting .22LR at 200 yards?
For example, according to the video, with "good ammunition you can expect from 30 to 45 percent better accuracy over not using a tuner." How is this 30 to 45 percent improvement measured? Is it 30 to 45 percent smaller groups? That would mean shrinking 1 MOA groups to .6 to .7 MOA.
Is this at 50 yards? 100? 200? A 30 to 45 percent shrinkage of groups with "good ammunition" would be a remarkable achievement at any distance.
The claim for ammo that's less than "good" is broad with Yannick telling viewers "you can get 15 to 65 percent increase in accuracy." In other words, from a little bit of improvement to something that's quite significant. It's a promise that can't fail to deliver.
In general, for both good and not-as-good ammo, how much testing was done to support the claims for accuracy? How reproducible are these results?
These are questions anyone considering a tuner should consider. They can be especially important for shooters who shoot at different distances. There can be little doubt that shooters will wish to consider anything that offers improvement on .22LR accuracy, especially when it comes to long range accuracy improvement because .22LR accuracy grows worse as distance increases.
Then the calculations and graph are flawed, as they show various launch angles to hit the pre set zero point, where in reality your launch angle would not change as you never know what the velocity will be so your launch angle is consistent.
I don't know why you think it is zeroed at 200 yds. At 9:50, when he is talking about drop from the slowest and fastest velocities, he clearly says the drop at 200. Hence he is not zeroed at 200, otherwise there wouldn't be any drop.
In addition, if you assume the vertical lines are every 10 yards, he is zeroed at 120yards. Plugging in those numbers to the Hornady website, I get a apogee of 5.8" at 75yards, which roughly lines up with the graph.
In addition, in the video he says the fastest velocity should have a drop of 41.4inches, but if you look at the last point on the blue line, it is around 25" on the vertical axis. Not sure why, but add this to the odd assumed 120yd zero, and I don't think his screenshot is showing the full graph.
Considering the whole point of the video, and a barrel tuner, is about making groups smaller, then yes, I think it is quite reasonable to assume the percentage improvement is talking about smaller groups.
And I suspect it was measured with a caliper, but that is just a guess. Also, if he used outside to outside or average distance from center, again you'll have to ask him, but outside to outside is the most likely, not that it really matters.
If you want to see the raw data, might I suggest you contact him?
It would be interesting to see an ammo of a certain lot shot without the can and then with the can as its tuned to show exactly what its capable of. Especially with different barrel lengths and profiles. Not really sure it would change the harmonics on an 18" MTU barrel with the mild mannered 22 rimfire. If it can in fact tune the barrel at the high or low of the wave well then its a possibility!! Im not in posession of any equiptment to verify this but smaller groups at varying distances with the same ammo lots seem to be pretty much proof positive that it has merits. Very interesting
Jamie, tuners will have several "sweet spots" and should work with other good ammos. Some shooters report that when changing between ammos or lots of ammo they find it necessary to make small adjustments, others say they don't.
Something remains unclear with regard to the chart and what it's supposed to show. The chart is shown in the video when Yannick is discussing the expected four inches of vertical spread at 200 yards.
While it's not known what the distance is on the horizontal axis, the vertical axis is labeled Bullet Drop (Inches) - Each line represents one inch change.
According to the video around the 10:00 mark, the extreme spread for the five shot group at 200 yards was 1014 fps to 1058 fps -- 44 fps.
If the lines on the graph are supposed to show the trajectories of the slowest, fastest, and average rounds as they zero on 200 yards, is it possible for any of these rounds to have a maximum height of only six inches above the line of sight, as shown in the graph? Ballistics calculators show .22LR rounds zeroed at 200 yards in the velocity range allegedly in question will have an apogee (maximum height above the line of sight) closer to 19 - 20.5 inches.
Further, if the zero distance is 200 yards, the greatest distance shown in the graph would appear to be at least 300 yards. At that distance, .22LR rounds with an MV in the range in question would drop 67 to 71 inches.
Does the chart shown in the video (reproduced above) have anything to do with shooting .22LR at 200 yards?
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There remains also the question of whether a tuner that will shrink groups at 50 yards will be able to shrink groups at all distances without any adjustments? Is such a thing possible?
A last question at this point is what is meant by the improvements of accuracy claimed in the video? These are important because there can be little doubt that they are the salient feature of this tuner and would be the purpose of most shooters in getting one.
For example, according to the video, with "good ammunition you can expect from 30 to 45 percent better accuracy over not using a tuner." How is this 30 to 45 percent improvement measured? Is it 30 to 45 percent smaller groups? That would mean shrinking 1 MOA groups to .6 to .7 MOA. Is this at 50 yards? 100? 200? A 30 to 45 percent shrinkage of groups with "good ammunition" would be a remarkable achievement at any distance.
The claim for ammo that's less than "good" is broad with Yannick telling viewers "you can get 15 to 65 percent increase in accuracy." In other words, from a little bit of improvement to something that's quite significant. It's a promise that can't fail to deliver.
In general, for both good and not-as-good ammo, how much testing was done to support the claims for accuracy? How reproducible are these results?
These are questions anyone considering a tuner should consider. They can be especially important for shooters who shoot at different distances. There can be little doubt that shooters will wish to consider anything that offers improvement on .22LR accuracy, especially when it comes to long range accuracy improvement because .22LR accuracy grows worse as distance increases.
Thank you for the information, Yanick. I apologize for misspelling your name in my previous posts.
If I understand the table of the testing data, you shot ten five-shot groups at 50 meters with the Eley Force, Tenex, Lapua X-Act, Midas +, and Center X. Either eight or nine groups were shot with the other ammos. The eight group sizes for the Eley Match were .70, .46, .33, .30, .30, .22, .33, and .37 inches.
Two of the ammos have a second set of five-shot groups, including a further ten with the Eley Match. The second set of ten group sizes are .45, .46, .43, .34, .43, .23, .32, .39, .37, and .65 inches. A total of 18 five-shot groups were shot with the Eley Match.
Is this correct?
Were all the groups shot with the Eley Match as well as the other ammo and groups shown shot with the tuner?
In the last column shown on the testing chart, the heading is "% best". What does this represent?
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On the targets shown above and in the linked thread, there are notations beside each group -- T 0.2, T 0.25, T 0.3 etc. Is it correct that these represent different Tuna Can tuner settings?
On your post that's linked above, you note that "T 0.2 seems to have the best group." What process are you using to determine and verify the correct setting?
Yes, those are the settings. Tuna Can was removed for chrono, so if you see a note in the pictures w/ bayo it means the magnetospeed was on. If you see a note with a T followed by a number on it, that means the Tuna Can was mounted, and the number indicates the position starting from approx 1 rotation from all the way in towards the receiver, progressing out towards the nuzzle in 0.10 increments. 10 increments/revolution of the Tuna Can body.
In my previous post, the T 0.2 setting resulted in the smallest group for the Eley Match. T 0.3 seemed to work well for the SK Rifle Match and the Lapua Center-X.
My methodology is to simply go and shoot 5 round groups every 0.1 increment for 1-3 revolutions until I find a promising node, as indicated by reduced group size. So in this case I seem to have found one early as it appears 0.2 -0.3 seem to have smaller group sizes depending on the ammo.
So in the test above, I am starting to verify by seeing if the previous results are repeatable and also reducing the increment size to 0.05. I want to confirm the presence of a node for the particular ammunition as well as how wide the node is. As you can see in the case of the Lapua Center-X, the T 0.2 value resulted in a relatively small group and I haven't seen the group open up on the lower tuner values, so I'm going to go back and test until the groups increase in size.
I'm also looking for the quality of the groups i.e. no horizontal or vertical stringing.
Also, once I'm more certain of the middle of the setting spread, I will go back and test in various conditions and shoot about 5 x 5 round groups per setting and a couple of 10 round groups to confirm the small groups are not anomalies.
I prefer to test at 50 yards in order to reduce environmental effects.
Thanks for the explanation. I hope the OP doesn't mind the diversion.
It can be a challenge to find a tuner setting that gives consistent and verifiable results. Results that seem good one day may not hold well the next. Rifle barrels will have several apparent "sweet spots" for the tuner, but one is usually more consistent and reliable than others.
Keeping in mind that the performance of ammo can vary by lot, have you established a firm baseline of performance without the tuner for each variety of ammo against which the results with the tuner can be compared?
The decision to test the tuner at 50 yards to reduce environmental effects is a good one. With .22LR performance, any inconsistencies or unanticipated variation in wind, ammo, rifle, and shooting gets magnified as distance increases. It becomes difficult to distinguish changes resulting from tuner performance from changes caused by other factors.