I can see the logic of your posting. I was picturing three targets at the distances referenced with their X-rings centered on a line. Now for the rifle to be zeroed at 50 yards the muzzle must be elevated slightly above this line so how can the ball hit low at 25? Lets suppose that the rifle is zeroed at 100 yards instead of 50. Could the ball then be low at 25 yards and then climb to zero at 100? I will set up some targets here with the x-rings at the same level and see what happens. Now what did I do with that surveyor's transit?DaveG
You need to buy a book on ballistics or one that ILLUSTRATES bullet paths to understand this. I think Lyman's BP Handbook will help more than shooting excercises.
The ball starts out low. It must rise to be on with the sights the center of the bore is pointed above the target at the distance the rifle is zeroed for. The is called the line of departure (LOD). The higher the velocity the longer the projectile will be below LOS (line of sight) since higher velocity produces less drop going to the target the LOD is at a shallower angle. DEPENDING on how far out it is zeroed. Zero a round ball at 100-120 yards and it will likely cross the line of sight at 8-10 yards. Zero it for 25 yards and it may not come up to line of sight until 25 yards.
If you sight a 30-06 with a scope that ins 1.5" over the bore dead on at 25-30 yards it may not be on again until 200-275 it will be high to that point. But it will be low to the close range zero. At 10 yards it will be about 1" low since the sights are high.
A M-16 with its very high sights will be low to a considerable distance and is often sighted a couple inches low at 20-25 to give the best military trajectory. I would have to dig to find the exact numbers.
Kentucky rifles usually have very low sights. This coupled with 1600-2000 fps velocity will keep the ball very close to LOS to 75-100 yards. Thus they did not have to hold high at close range to make up for high sights as is the case with the M-16. It would be impossible to shoot a squirrel in the head with the M-16 or modern scoped rifle at 15-20 yards since the sights are so far from the bullet track. The shooter would have to hold well over the squirrels head to hit it.
With the low sighted longrifle you just put the sights in the middle of his head (depending again on the range the rifle is zeroed for, velocity etc etc).
Low velocity bullets need a higher LOD to get the bullet to the target at 50-100 yards so the bullet will cross LOS sooner.
This is not something that shooting through several targets is likely to solve since unless the paper is very thin it may cause the bullet to deflect.
Dan