It’s That Simple - Precision Rifle Shooting
.With any long-range shooting, there are some ballistics basics you’ll need to properly understand beforehand.
Accurately hitting a target, especially at long range, requires the mastery of two skills:
1) determining the direction a bullet needs to be shot so that it hit s the target and
2) shooting the bullet in the precise direction needed.
It’s that simple.
The first skill involves knowing the path the bullet will take on its way to the target. This is mastered with knowledge, some math and correctly identifying certain variables like distance, wind, and temperature — it is all about the conditions/environment.
The second skill involves fi ring the rifl e when it is aimed exactly where it needs to be. This is mastered with lots of practice and proper employment of the fundamentals of shooting — it is all about you.
Obviously, there are many variables and fundamentals to learn about and master. This article will aim to address each one of these fundamentals to help make you a better long-range shooter.
A Bullet’s Path
Bullets don’t travel in a straight line to the target. If they did, then long-range shooting would be easy, and it wouldn’t even be a thing that people discussed, practiced, or learned about — shooting at a target 1 yard away and 1,000 yards away would be exactly the same. On second thought, maybe it’s a good thing that bullets don’t travel in a straight line. After all, mastering long-range shooting is very rewarding. When a bullet leaves a rifl e, there are many variables that change its path. The biggest effect on a bullet’s path is also the easiest to account for: that is GRAVITY.
Gravity
The moment a bullet leaves the barrel, gravity starts to pull the bullet down off of its original path.
Yes, you read that correctly. Bullets fall the moment that they leave the barrel. If that seems odd to you, then you probably already know that the bullet travels in an arc on its way to the target.
Wait a minute...how can the bullet fall immediately and also travel in an arc, which means it gets further from the ground at first before it falls back to the target?
Simple — your barrel is angled upwards even though your scope is looking straight at the target. Therefore, the original path of your bullet is a straight line at an upward angle.
The bullet, because of gravity, immediately starts to fall from its original path. Because objects fall faster the longer they fall (up to a certain point), the bullet falls faster and more off of its original path the longer it travels. This is what makes the arc path to the target — the bullet falling further and faster off of its original path.
Can Your Bullet “Out-Run” Gravity?
At 100 yards, gravity absolutely has an effect on the bullet. But, it doesn’t affect it much because most rifle bullets get to a 100-yard target very quickly, and, therefore, they don’t have much time to fall.
The amount a bullet falls due to gravity is partly based on how fast the bullet is traveling — but not for the reason you might think. A fast-moving bullet does not somehow resist the effect of gravity because it has momentum as it flies forward. In fact, if you dropped a bullet from your hand from the same height and at the exact same time as you fi red a bullet from a perfectly level rifl e barrel, which bullet will hit the ground first? They will both hit the ground at the exact same time. The fact that one bullet was traveling horizontally at 3,000 fps has no effect on that bullet falling due to gravity.
The speed of the bullet, however, does have an effect on how much the bullet falls before it hits a certain target because of the time it takes to get to the target.
Objects fall due to gravity at an acceleration rate of 9.8 m/s^2. This means that a bullet will be falling at a speed of 9.8 m/s at the end of its first second of falling. It will then increase its speed an additional 9.8 m/s for every additional second it falls.
Therefore, a bullet not only falls farther the longer it travels to the target, it falls farther/faster each additional second! This means that a bullet that can get to a target in half the time will fall less than half the distance of a bullet that takes twice as long to get to a target (Remember, it’ll fall more in the second half of its flight).
Biggest Effect
Gravity affects a bullet’s path more than any other variable. Every 100 yards the bullet travels, it falls more and more. This isn’t just because of the fact that the bullet is falling faster the longer it flies, it is also because the bullet is slowing down due to air resistance.Yes, these are related.
For example, the bullet travels from 100 yards to 200 yards much faster than it travels from 900 yards to 1,000 yards. Even if the bullet were still falling at the same speed between these two points (it’s not — it’s falling faster), then it would have more time to fall at the further distances. This is why my .308 Winchester bullet only falls 4 inches from 100 yards to 200 yards, and it falls a little over 100 inches from 900 yards to 1,000 yards. Trust me, except for hitting something in flight or shooting in a tornado, nothing else is going to move your bullet’s path over 100 inches within 100 yards of travel.
Easiest to Account For
Once you figure out how much your particular bullet will drop for each distance, you can record the information and use it again! Gravity will affect your bullet the same no matter where you are as long as your bullet is traveling at the same speed.
Marine with 24th MEU, Maritime Raid Force(MRF) looks through the scope of Barret M107 .50 cal Special Application Scoped Rifle (SASR) during a training exercise. |
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