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  2. Ballistic coefficient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_coefficient

    These formulae produce the projectile velocity at range, drag and trajectories. The modern day commercially published ballistic tables or software computed ballistics tables for small arms, sporting ammunition are exterior ballistic, trajectory tables. [49] [50] [51] The 1870 Bashforth tables were to 2,800 ft/s (853 m/s).

  3. Ogive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogive

    A secant ogive of sharpness = / = The ogive shape of the Space Shuttle external tank Ogive on a 9×19mm Parabellum cartridge. An ogive (/ ˈ oʊ dʒ aɪ v / OH-jyve) is the roundly tapered end of a two- or three-dimensional object. Ogive curves and surfaces are used in engineering, architecture, woodworking, and ballistics.

  4. Very-low-drag bullet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very-low-drag_bullet

    Development of VLD bullets has focused on reducing a form factor defined as the sectional density divided by the ballistic coefficient. [2] Form factor can be minimized by: bullet nose design incorporating a secant ogive, tangent ogive, Von Kármán ogive or Sears-Haack profile [3] the use of tapered bullet heels, also known as boat-tails [1]

  5. External ballistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_ballistics

    External ballistics or exterior ballistics is the part of ballistics that deals with the behavior of a projectile in flight. The projectile may be powered or un-powered, guided or unguided, spin or fin stabilized, flying through an atmosphere or in the vacuum of space, but most certainly flying under the influence of a gravitational field.

  6. 152 mm gun M1910/30 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/152_mm_gun_M1910/30

    5.1 Ammunition table. 5.2 Ammunition abbreviations. 5.3 Armour penetration table. 6 Notes. 7 References. Toggle the table of contents. ... (OP) – ogive point shell ...

  7. Ballistic table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_table

    Example of a ballistic table for a given 7.62×51mm NATO load. Bullet drop and wind drift are shown both in mrad and MOA.. A ballistic table or ballistic chart, also known as the data of previous engagements (DOPE) chart, is a reference data chart used in long-range shooting to predict the trajectory of a projectile and compensate for physical effects of gravity and wind drift, in order to ...

  8. .22-250 Remington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.22-250_Remington

    Two years later, in 1965, Remington Arms adopted the .22-250, added "Remington" to the name and chambered their Model 700 and 40 XB match rifles for the cartridge along with a line of commercial ammunition, thus establishing its commercial specification. [6] The .22-250 was the first non-Weatherby caliber offered in the unique Weatherby Mark V ...

  9. Spitzer (bullet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spitzer_(bullet)

    A spitzer bullet (from German: Spitzgeschoss, "point shot") is a munitions term, primarily regarding fully-powered and intermediate small-arms ammunition, describing bullets featuring an aerodynamically pointed nose shape, called a spire point, sometimes combined with a tapered base, called a boat tail (then a spitzer boat-tail bullet), in order to reduce drag and obtain a lower drag ...