Which weather components do you need to worry about when shooting?
The wind direction and velocity is obviously the biggest factor. However, until a couple years ago, I meticulously monitored the temperature, altitude, air pressure, shot angle and humidity of my shooting sessions. I was reminded today while shooting in my backyard which of these is the only one (other than wind) that most shooters need to be aware of: temperature.
Temperature
I used to scratch my head wondering why my gun needed to be zeroed so frequently between shooting sessions. It took lots of trial and error to discover that the air temperature was the cause. If you zeroed your gun in 80F weather (like I did this summer) and decided to do some winter shooting in 20F weather (like I just did in my backyard today) expect your point of impact to drop a full inch at 50 yards. Without that knowledge you are likely to assume gun or scope error and constantly wonder why your gun's zero changes unexpectedly. This phenomenon is exponentially worse at 100 yards. I use a temperature sensitivity factor of 1.7 in Strelok to approximate the real world results I see. (Note Strelok says the factor is usually between 0.6 and 1.4, but that for airguns it is usually zero). My experience says otherwise. I landed on a factor of 1.7 through trial and error. If you shoot different distances with different pellets and velocities, your temperature sensitivity factor may be different. I haven’t experimented with other projectiles to find out.
According to Streklok, with a sensitivity factor of 1.7, shooting 25.4gr gr, JSBs at 890 fps at a distance of 50 yards, a 10 degree shift in temperature will raise or drop your point of impact by about 0.3 MOA.
But what of the other factors? Let's look.
Barometric pressure
It takes severe air pressure swings to noticeably affect point of impact. An increase of 1 inHg (A very large jump) will decrease POI about 0.3 MOA at 100 yards. In all the times I’ve kept track, the air pressure always measured near the normal range of high 29s to 30 inHg. It never strayed enough from this range for me to ever worry about.
Elevation/Altitude
I was surprised to learn an Increase in altitude has almost no effect. Apparently, the air doesn’t thin at higher elevations as much as my mind assumed.
Humidity
I figured POI would drop as the amount of water floating in the air rose. Nope. I had to use Chairgun to figure out the effects of humidity. It should have been a clue that the effect is minimal when Strelok doesn’t even have a place to enter relative humidity on the weather input page. Short story short: There is no difference between 0% humidity and 100% humidity. I don’t claim to fully understand this one.
Shot Angle
The bottom line is that minor inclines and declines are negligible. Unless the angle is SEVERE, such as shooting up in trees, there is very little POI shift. The change is only ¼ inch at 50 yards for a 5 degree incline/decline.
So in summary, it is useful to know what temperature you zeroed your rifle at. If you find yourself scratching your head why the point of impact of your pellets has changed, there is a good chance temperature is playing a factor.
The wind direction and velocity is obviously the biggest factor. However, until a couple years ago, I meticulously monitored the temperature, altitude, air pressure, shot angle and humidity of my shooting sessions. I was reminded today while shooting in my backyard which of these is the only one (other than wind) that most shooters need to be aware of: temperature.
Temperature
I used to scratch my head wondering why my gun needed to be zeroed so frequently between shooting sessions. It took lots of trial and error to discover that the air temperature was the cause. If you zeroed your gun in 80F weather (like I did this summer) and decided to do some winter shooting in 20F weather (like I just did in my backyard today) expect your point of impact to drop a full inch at 50 yards. Without that knowledge you are likely to assume gun or scope error and constantly wonder why your gun's zero changes unexpectedly. This phenomenon is exponentially worse at 100 yards. I use a temperature sensitivity factor of 1.7 in Strelok to approximate the real world results I see. (Note Strelok says the factor is usually between 0.6 and 1.4, but that for airguns it is usually zero). My experience says otherwise. I landed on a factor of 1.7 through trial and error. If you shoot different distances with different pellets and velocities, your temperature sensitivity factor may be different. I haven’t experimented with other projectiles to find out.
According to Streklok, with a sensitivity factor of 1.7, shooting 25.4gr gr, JSBs at 890 fps at a distance of 50 yards, a 10 degree shift in temperature will raise or drop your point of impact by about 0.3 MOA.
But what of the other factors? Let's look.
Barometric pressure
It takes severe air pressure swings to noticeably affect point of impact. An increase of 1 inHg (A very large jump) will decrease POI about 0.3 MOA at 100 yards. In all the times I’ve kept track, the air pressure always measured near the normal range of high 29s to 30 inHg. It never strayed enough from this range for me to ever worry about.
Elevation/Altitude
I was surprised to learn an Increase in altitude has almost no effect. Apparently, the air doesn’t thin at higher elevations as much as my mind assumed.
Humidity
I figured POI would drop as the amount of water floating in the air rose. Nope. I had to use Chairgun to figure out the effects of humidity. It should have been a clue that the effect is minimal when Strelok doesn’t even have a place to enter relative humidity on the weather input page. Short story short: There is no difference between 0% humidity and 100% humidity. I don’t claim to fully understand this one.
Shot Angle
The bottom line is that minor inclines and declines are negligible. Unless the angle is SEVERE, such as shooting up in trees, there is very little POI shift. The change is only ¼ inch at 50 yards for a 5 degree incline/decline.
So in summary, it is useful to know what temperature you zeroed your rifle at. If you find yourself scratching your head why the point of impact of your pellets has changed, there is a good chance temperature is playing a factor.