Could someone please explain exactly what "Standard Deviation" is and how important it is when chronographing pellets.
+1 simplest definition."Tominco""SD" is the average difference in feet per second between shots.
"yo_eddy"Standard deviation is the square root of the variance. Variance is the average of of squared difference from the mean (average) of all your data. The calculation changes slightly if the data is a sample of a total population, but in this instance you are calculating the entire population (your 10 shot string)
This link has a pretty good explanation of SD, variance and the calculations for both
http://www.mathsisfun.com/data/standard-deviation.html
This was my second guess, lol, Think I'll just let the chrony figure it out.
jk
Scotchmo is right on his point. All other things being equal I'd take a gun shooting an SD of 1 over an SD of 2 no matter what the ES was. ES has no predictive value unless you shoot lots of strings and do analysis based upon a number of measurements. SD is intended to be predictive. A gun might show a good SD for ten strings and an exceptionally bad ES in one of those ten strings. It is much less likely that a gun will show one bad SD out of a set of 10 strings. Another way to say that is that 1 shot in a hundred can drive your ES into the ugly zone but it takes a LOT of bad shots to push one SD into the ugly zone."parallax"Example shot string #2 is a great but certainly extreme example, the shots are either 820 fps or 780 fps with nothing in between. Stats are not necessary to realize that is a highly undesirable situation. I'd think watching the real time crony feedback would raise a red flag.
Clearly you know your maths. Well written. And yes scotchmo did give a well contrived (and for sure nearly impossible) counter example."parallax"oldspook -
I'm glad you responded & you are right. Standard deviation is a good predictive calculation that is intended to represent the total population of a normal distribution. Scotchmo's string #2 is not a normal distribution - I suspect he knows this. However, it is a very clever & extreme example where standard deviation provided what appears to be better information versus ES.
As always, I need to be more clear in my writing. I prefer ES for a gun that I have verified has a normal distribution. Flyers will happen and influence ES - your point is accurate & conceded.
Now I'm no expert on the varying shot string characteristics of the PCP airgun world, but I do know (as most member do) MV is important for accuracy - especially as target distance increases. So, if one has a gun that shots a normal distribution & longer range accuracy is important, what statistical measure would you put more priority on?
Your answer may vary with regulated versus un-regulated airguns, but please think about it in terms of user refill pressure. What I mean is that most guys refill a PCP at some fixed air tube pressure. Looking forward to your response.