Re: from precision shooting:
Quote:
Originally posted by ezrunner
When fired by a human, all shot groups are a donut. The shooter
with the smallest donut wins.
Observationally, paint behaves the same, this is due to the
natural mechanics of the body.
Question: AGD/Tom.. or Glenn,
"Does a paintball marker, when held in a fixed mechanism, exhibit
this same tendency, or is there a pattern grouping that is somewhat
uniform over a reasonably large sample set?"
-rob
Yes, shooting from a firm and fixed hold on the barrel generates doughnut shaped shot patterns. The less spin the ball has when it enters the air stream, the smaller the doughnut.
If the balls leave the barrel with the seem either directly in line with or directly across the line of flight, the shot pattern tends to be more lineal in nature.
Re: from precision shooting:
Quote:
Originally posted by ezrunner
When fired by a human, all shot groups are a donut..."Does a paintball marker, when held in a fixed mechanism, exhibit this same tendency, or is there a pattern grouping that is somewhat
uniform over a reasonably large sample set?"
Here are some shot patterns that Tom posted:
https://www.automags.org/~TomAGD/spin...aterns2_lg.jpg
https://www.automags.org/~TomAGD/spin...paterns_lg.jpg
Dance technique and paintball physics
*Edit*Why post when under the influence?*Edit*
Ok, I'll shut up now.