Except that mass isn't part of BC. SD is, which has mass in it, but there's absolutely nothing that says a 160gr 7mm will drift less than a 140gr 7mm everything else equal. A 140gr bullet can have a higher BC than a 160gr bullet. Launched from the same case, the 160 will drift more at every distance.Conditions and context?
Sometimes it doesn’t matter as a practical matter, especially inside 300.
A 115 VLD out of a .257 Weatherby will buck wind better than a 115 VLD out of a 6 creed because of higher velocity, but there is a point that the BC wins out as the velocity decay is faster with the .257.
I can show the ballistics, but I don’t have a .257 115 in my app any more. Can’t remember the velocity my buddy is running.
Edit to add: For me, it is helpful to remember that “time” is a critical part of the calculations for drop and drift. The less time something is in the air, the less effect wind and gravity has.
Look at the ballistic charts in a post above, the 22 creed is “better” than the 7 SS, until a point that the lower weight of the 22 means it slows faster. The extra mass of the 180 means velocity decays slower. The BCs of the two aren’t that far apart to make a huge difference.
The part I took issue with
That bolded part is empirically false.At 800 to 1000 yards, you have to have crazy high velocity or you have to be a high BC bullet and over 150 grains to buck wind.