All else being equal, heavier bullets lose velocity and trajectory faster than lighter bullets.
Impossible to answer without knowing Velocity and what your end state is.
Gravity adds 32.1 feet per second to the bullet's downward velocity every second after the shot is fired.
No. That's why a bullet shot horizontally from a gun and a bullet dropped from the muzzle of the gun at the same time both hit the ground at the same time.
pp = shot He has shot his last bullet.
it all depends on the speed that the bullet is shot at. other contributing factors include the angle of the shot and the distance from the ground that the bullet is shot at. sadly, the x-factor of this question is that the ground determines how far it will ricochet. if the ground is water, it will not ricochet.
no
A 150 grain bullet shot from a 308 will start dropping the fraction of a second it leaves the barrel.
Higher fps and low grain = longer more acurate shot lower fps higher grain = power ful slow bullet
velocity
Velocity
Impossible to answer without knowing Velocity and what your end state is.
it should shoot 1inch or better three shot group at 100 yards. try different bullet weights.
Gravity adds 32.1 feet per second to the bullet's downward velocity every second after the shot is fired.
It can affect the shot's accuracy. If you are unbalanced, your shot will most likely not be straight, unless you anticipate the shot. You have the most control over the ball in your shooting stance. I prefer to face the basket with one foot slightly ahead of the other.
No. That's why a bullet shot horizontally from a gun and a bullet dropped from the muzzle of the gun at the same time both hit the ground at the same time.
projectile
Because that was the way it was loaded into the gun, shot charge, bullet charge, shot charge, bullet charge. If you load it that way, it will shoot that way.