The upcoming online training will address this specifically. It’s not something that really translates to a talk.
Excellent. Can’t wait!
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The upcoming online training will address this specifically. It’s not something that really translates to a talk.
I put one together with a bigger battery powered air mattress pump and some poly hose that moved a lot of volume and didn't really notice a distinguishable difference in cooling time when using it. It was more annoying listening to it run than it was to wait an extra minute.Don't overpay for crappy barrel coolers.
Mark and Sam are exactly who I'm thinking of with regard to saying it's not a thing. The question of transonic shooting is purely academic, I don't shoot that far and probably never will but I'm still curious to hear what he has to say.Interesting question obviously I’m not Form
There’s a few contradictions here you’re talking serious long range stuff and going transonic and mixing brass all in the one statement, that ain’t gonna end well
On the other hand plenty of people deal with the issue of going transonic without to much drama. Look up “Mark and Sam after work “
Curious to hear Forms perspective on projectile stability when transonic. I understand that historically our fathers and grandfathers made a big deal out of how bullets lose all sense of direction when travelling through the transonic zone I've seen one or two you tubers who claim it isn't a thing.
A secondary question, when reloading is it actually worth separating brass out by the original manufacturer or do we as shooters suck more than the difference it may or may not make. Let's say for arguments sake a guy has 200 empty sako .308 cases, 200 ish hornady cases and a mixed bag of about 150 of pretty much everything else.