Best Ballistics App Today?

I’ve got some homework to do. I’ve downloaded and tried a number of the apps, but it’s taken more time than I care to admit to input data and utilize the different interfaces.

I’ve found a few of the apps output very similar solutions, but I’ve gotten some pretty drastic differences between some of them. Can very possibly be due to input issues, but there’s been up to 1 MOA differences at 500yds.
 
You absolutely have to make sure all inputs match on the solvers in order to compare. There are also a few tricks on the kestrel like making sure that the bullet length is correct in order to get the correct aerodynamic jump. I have found that when I pull in environmentalist from kestrel via Bluetooth to Hornady 4DOF and BallisticARC that my dope matches across all. This also includes Patagonia Ballistics in the desktop which I use to make my hard dope. I will quick reference this card at PRS match for avg temp of the day and my dope is always within a tenth of the kestrel. I do the cards without SD and AJ and make notes what to add or subtract based on wind direction and it’s right there. This is with very well known and tested Bergers predominantly. I could see where a more obscure bullet that doesn’t have as much data could be tough. That said sometimes I use custom curves sometimes I just roll with g7.

Sometimes the solvers on the rangefinders can get skewed if device hasn’t matched ambient temp yet but this would have to be fairly extreme.
 
Applied ballistics works. 4dof at extreme high/low angles is way jacked up. Not that many of us shoot those angles but a sheep hunter or extreme mountain hunter may, do not use 4dof for that. To my knowledge they're working on the firmware, I've actually heard a new much more powful 4dof solver is in the works, but it requires too much processor power for what a 5700 has to offer.
 
Another vote for the sig BDX rangefinder/app combo.

Missed an opportunity at a bear this year because we were fiddling with an app trying to get all the data input for the shot. The next weekend, using my rifle and BDX setup, we got an initial range and dialed to 5 1/4 MOA. Bear kept moving so by the time the shooter was settled in for the shot I was able to range again and we needed to adjust two more clicks. That took all of three seconds and the shot was dead on. Very efficient system that allows you to adjust on the fly.

Practice will eliminate the fiddling. And, knowing your guns dope will help as well. I run rifles that have similar elevation adjustments for that reason.

You can have paper dope and kill. There should be no input into an app in the seconds before a shot. Screenshot the dope for the day, Range the animal and kill. A screenshot or paper dope card based on a reasonably close density altitude will kill to 500ish no problem.

Don’t get all gadgety and complex.

That said, I ran Sig BDX 2400 and Sig BDX 3000 to a Garmin 701 and now run a Fury with AB to my Garmin Delta Tactix AB. It can also run to Kestrel and some others. It is an easy way. I like to range and have the numbers on my wrist. I put 10 mph in wind two for it to display wind call. I leave wind one at zero so it doesn’t calculate aerodynamic jump.

I agree with the others, for an app, AB is the gold standard, no one is doing more for long range than Litz and crew.

But, the app isn’t going to be the limiting factor if you don’t learn how it works, enter the right data, learn the wind, and learn how to shoot.
 
With ballistic apps and solvers, what is everyone doing for their MV? My setup is a Kestrel w/AB and a Leica rangefinder that will spit out my dope in seconds. It's not cheap, but it's great. My rifle's MV at 65 degrees is 3096 and that is the MV in my Kestrel. I am certain that increases and decreases with temps and where I am, it can be 30 in the morning and 70 in the evening. Say you impose a 700 yard max on a wild animal, how much of an effect is a MV change between temps and your elevation dial? Or do you know what your MV is prior to hunting at various temps?
 
AB has input for “powder temp” and to account for this. Not sure if it is in the Kestrel or others.

Short answer is there are other things to worry about missing inside 500ish yards because of it. Further, run your dope and look at 675, 700, and 725. For mine, from 675 it’s roughly 25 fps to 700 and then another 23 fps to 725. Dope is 3.2, 3.4, and 3.6.

Don’t use the muzzle velocity when ammo is hot, or fudge it down some if that’s the case.

If you are paranoid, test ammo. Keep some in a cooler frozen and some ambient temp. Shoot it and see the difference.

The easy answer is what I do. I keep a magazine or bullets in an inside jacket when it is cold. If you have a long range shot, you will have time to use the warm ammo. If you chamber the warm round and let the barrel cool it, you lose the advantage.

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I have zeiss lrf binos, kilo 10k, kilo 2400 range finder. These are all the best solution for dope on quick opportunities. The zeiss dope takes some truing, but the two sig units run AB. Swaro El range, fury 5000ab, Leica pro all do the same thing. Buy the best you can afford. The zeiss, Leica and swaro by far have the best glass of lrf binos, believe Leica pro is only one running applied ballistics tho.
 
Downloading your rifle profile to your rangefinder for ballistics is the way to go for a quick firing solution. I have been using the Sig rangefinder which has the AB solver engine. But on the model I have it doesn’t give wind holds.

I use GEOBallistics app with the WeatherFlow to get enviro data. As you guys probably know, Vortex purchased GEO to put that solver engine into their new ballistic rangefinder. Unfortunately, the Vortex Rangefinder only supports Kestrel, won’t support my WeatherFlow. But at least if I true up the AB solver in the Range finder with GEOBallistics App I am good to go.
 
I’m going down this path determining the ideal app. I have Hornady, Shooter and Kestrel, but looking at AB and Leica, or others. One of my hopes is that there is a good web interface, in addition to the app. Shooter isn’t working this way (at least for me), as the sync between the app and web aren’t seamless or even consistent. Does AB do this?
 
I’m going down this path determining the ideal app. I have Hornady, Shooter and Kestrel, but looking at AB and Leica, or others. One of my hopes is that there is a good web interface, in addition to the app. Shooter isn’t working this way (at least for me), as the sync between the app and web aren’t seamless or even consistent. Does AB do this?
AB has web based integration and also downloads new custom curves whenever the AB Mobile lab is out in the field at matches. However it's out of service for rest of 2024. You can upload your profiles from mobile app and backup to web server. I however am currently having issues getting it to sync to web. There is something big coming from AB in the next few months, don't know what it is, but it's not just app but hardware based.
 
AB has web based integration and also downloads new custom curves whenever the AB Mobile lab is out in the field at matches. However it's out of service for rest of 2024. You can upload your profiles from mobile app and backup to web server. I however am currently having issues getting it to sync to web. There is something big coming from AB in the next few months, don't know what it is, but it's not just app but hardware based.
So hold off on getting AB? That sounds a bit like Shooter is performing for me.

This is not a good rabbit hole. My Leica RF is a bit dated (2700-B), and while it has ballistic capabilities, I think it requires the use of a microSD, and may only use MOA and not Mils. Now I seem to remember a podcast or a thread (or both) in which @Formidilosus or @Ryan Avery were talking about RF binos... I fear for my wallet, so maybe I need to go back and read the equipment vs. practice thread a few more times.
 
AB has web based integration and also downloads new custom curves whenever the AB Mobile lab is out in the field at matches. However it's out of service for rest of 2024. You can upload your profiles from mobile app and backup to web server. I however am currently having issues getting it to sync to web. There is something big coming from AB in the next few months, don't know what it is, but it's not just app but hardware based.
Well, I'm pretty impatient, so I purchased AB and two of the custom curves. I finally got the web sync to work (it's bizarre, at least to me) that your login in is either via Google or your Apple ID. It could be user error, but I'm also unable to find a current user manual online, and there does not appear to be a web interface (that allows you to make changes to your saved firearms and ammo online as opposed to the app).
 
Strelok Pro is an outstanding app, incredibly reliable and feature rich.
As a solid backup, I also use the BDX to phone app that pairs with my bino. It does require some fine tuning upfront to dial in your rifle and round specs, but once that’s set, it becomes a very accurate and handy reference in the field.
 
Is Strelok available again? It hasnt been available for a year or two due to the designer being a russion citizen and it was taken down after the ukraine war started, or something along those lines.

I've used applied ballistics for several years until this past winter--their new update pretty much ruined it for me--it was somewhat klunky before, now it's bordering on unusable. I'm leaning toward moving to shooter, but if there are other good options I'm all ears.
 
I've used Shooter, 4DOF, Sig BDX and now Revic.

I'd say Revic is my favorite so far. Like the option for ballistic calculator and a table solution, profiles are easy to setup and manage, general UX is solid.

Sig BDX doesn't have a ballistic solution platform built into the app. Only the rangefinder. Revic's rangefinder/app integration is much better.

4DOF has the solution and chart options, but no rangefinder integration, limited bullet library, poor UX and issues with returning wrong solutions compared to other calculators (several threads on that here).

Shooter only has the table option and is pretty clunky with half the settings being in the iPhone App Settings module. It's good for what I use it for after I figured out how to set it up.
 
Is Strelok available again? It hasnt been available for a year or two due to the designer being a russion citizen and it was taken down after the ukraine war started, or something along those lines.

I've used applied ballistics for several years until this past winter--their new update pretty much ruined it for me--it was somewhat klunky before, now it's bordering on unusable. I'm leaning toward moving to shooter, but if there are other good options I'm all ears.

Strelok Pro is Android only with some twist and turns to download it. Some folks still have the older iPhone version, which was downloaded before the ban, but now, an iPhone updated will ruin it. If you're on iOS and didn’t get it back then, unfortunately, it's no longer available.
 
I've used Shooter, 4DOF, Sig BDX and now Revic.

I'd say Revic is my favorite so far. Like the option for ballistic calculator and a table solution, profiles are easy to setup and manage, general UX is solid.

Sig BDX doesn't have a ballistic solution platform built into the app. Only the rangefinder. Revic's rangefinder/app integration is much better.

4DOF has the solution and chart options, but no rangefinder integration, limited bullet library, poor UX and issues with returning wrong solutions compared to other calculators (several threads on that here).

Shooter only has the table option and is pretty clunky with half the settings being in the iPhone App Settings module. It's good for what I use it for after I figured out how to set it up.
So in the last 30 min I downloaded 4DOF, Shooter and AB.

4DOF - Very noisy, non-intuitive interface, getting where you need to go is like turning pages in a women's' magazine full of makeup and shampoo ads.

AB - Looks cool and clean on initial impression but too many buttons to get to where you need to go. Has some cool features and visuals but I don't see "speed" happening here in a game on situation.

Shooter - I actually like the simplicity of it so far. Clean, limited options up top and straight to the point (for me that's the table at the moment). Kind of a "too dumb to mess up" model.

Having said all that - I'm not worried about the time to enter initial type data across all 3 apps. Just is what it is. 2nd, I don't, and probably won't ever have more than 3 rifles in this thing. The calculations across all 3 (so far) appear to be close enough the measurements are negligible (out to 600 so far).

I'm no expert, I'm just an IT nerd in my day job.
 
I'd say Revic is my favorite so far. Like the option for ballistic calculator and a table solution, profiles are easy to setup and manage, general UX is solid.
I like the Revic app, but for some reason it doesn't track correctly with my AB solutions from my rangefinder when I move to different elevations/atmospheric conditions. Started a thread on it but didn't really get anything nailed down. I spent enough time this last year truing my AB profile up with my load that I fully trust it, just bugs me I can't get Revic to match perfectly as a backup.
 
@benconfused dont use any app "in the moment", 99% of the time just plug your enviros in in the morning to make a dope card and screenshot it, and use that for the screensaver photo on your phone.
 
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