I see there are both flat base and dish base slug. Which would be most accurate and does it matter if dish or flat base. Does it make a difference on how the slug flies or what? Which shoot best from a fx slug liner?
Boat tails change both the drag coefficient and the stability if designed properly, and therefore the BC and the accuracy. If it is not done properly, i.e. too big an angle, too long a boat tail or a rounded edge on the base, then the air will either not notice there is a boat tail, so it is doing nothing, or when the slug yaws the air will suddenly see the boat tail and the stability of the slug will rapidly change with results on accuracy you can imagine. Most of the boat tail slugs I have seen have far too big an angle or too big a boat tail, probably because they look cool.What about a Boattail?
Not necessarily smarter, just worked a lot on that kind of thing, so maybe more experienced.Wondered about that, there are people smarter than me that knows things
Not unless there were other problems with the design leading to yaw problems.When the Patriot Javelin gen 2 slugs were being developed the testing seemed to indicate that dish based outperformed flat based in wind and turbulence while inside performance was virtually identical.
Is there any scientific reason that this would be the case?
Still waiting for .25 . Dubber is .22 biased cause where he lives. .25 is as xlose to perfect in the air gun world. 6.5 is all I got to say bout thatWhen the Patriot Javelin gen 2 slugs were being developed the testing seemed to indicate that dish based outperformed flat based in wind and turbulence while inside performance was virtually identical.
Is there any scientific reason that this would be the case?