Anyone who has been on the forums for any amount of time will have come across heated arguments about groups getting better down range than at close range.
I myself have experienced groups that support such a theory (at first glance) but I don't believe it is necessarily that the bullet started flying more straight or more true.
If you look closely at this image, you can see the trace or vapor trail is spiral. I think this spiral explains much of the argument and debate.
I think the reason group sizes can miraculously reduce in size at long range is simply a condition where this spiraling effect becomes synchronized over a number of shots for some un-explained condition, or perhaps just luck.
I also think that if the target was moved forward a few yards, the group would impact somewhere else within the overall spiral pattern. (I have tested for this and evidence inconclusively supports the theory.)
There may also be a rhythm to the spiral where it goes into and out of phase at different distances.
I also suspect that close range groups may not have been in flight long enough to synchronize into a repeatable spiral pattern (out of phase) and impact randomly along the arc of the spiral to produce the larger group.
A hummer is a barrel that simply produces a really small spiral and thereby, really small groups.
All of this in addition to natural dispersion in accordance with the usual ballistic factors.
I myself have experienced groups that support such a theory (at first glance) but I don't believe it is necessarily that the bullet started flying more straight or more true.
If you look closely at this image, you can see the trace or vapor trail is spiral. I think this spiral explains much of the argument and debate.
I think the reason group sizes can miraculously reduce in size at long range is simply a condition where this spiraling effect becomes synchronized over a number of shots for some un-explained condition, or perhaps just luck.
I also think that if the target was moved forward a few yards, the group would impact somewhere else within the overall spiral pattern. (I have tested for this and evidence inconclusively supports the theory.)
There may also be a rhythm to the spiral where it goes into and out of phase at different distances.
I also suspect that close range groups may not have been in flight long enough to synchronize into a repeatable spiral pattern (out of phase) and impact randomly along the arc of the spiral to produce the larger group.
A hummer is a barrel that simply produces a really small spiral and thereby, really small groups.
All of this in addition to natural dispersion in accordance with the usual ballistic factors.

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