Monday, February 4, 2013

Adapting the Marine Corps Windage Formula for Rounds Other than the M118



(This was my first paying published article.)
 
Adapting the Marine Corps Windage Formula for Rounds Other than the M118

by Donald Plunkett

 

 

The United States Marine Corps scout sniper manual (FMFM1-3b) contains the following formula for figuring windage;

 

R X W

---------  = Windage change in minutes of angle (MOA)

    C

 

Where R= the range to target in hundreds of yards, W = the wind velocity in miles per hour, and C = a constant.

 

The Marines use the constant 15 out to 500 yards.  Beyond 500 yards the constant changes so that;

 

C = 14 at 600 yards

       13 at 700 to 800 yards

       12 at 900 yards

and 11 at 1000 yards.

 

This formula is simpler to remember than a full set of windage tables but it is an approximation based on the M118 match 173 grain bullet at a muzzle velocity of 2550 feet per second fired at sea level.  Any changes in these variables throws the formula further and further off until its usefulness is virtually eliminated.  By starting with a set of windage tables established for your particular rifle, load and conditions it is possible to back calculate and come up with a new set of constants that make this formula precise enough for most military sniping.

 



The first step is to obtain a full set of windage tables tailored to your rifle.  The best way to do this is to actually fire at measured ranges under a variety of precisely measured wind conditions.  As you record the required sight corrections in your data book you will develop a complete real world picture of what your rifle is doing under all conditions.  If you are unable to fire at the actual ranges you can come up with a pretty good approximation by using a chronograph and a good ballistics program.  If you use a computer generated windage table you will need to know the ballistic coefficient  (BC) of the bullet you are using.  Remember that the BC changes as the velocity changes so make sure you are using the correct BC for your muzzle velocity.  Be sure your BC matches the lot of bullets you are using. For example Sierra has recently changed the meplat on their 168 grain .308 matchking bullet and updated the BC for it.  You will also want to plug in the average temperature and altitude where you expect to be shooting.  Remember that changes in altitude can throw your elevation and windage data off.  If your data is set up for sea level and you are planning to shoot at 5000 feet you will want to calculate a new set of data and rezero when you reach the new altitude.    Temperature effects on trajectory are less predictable and should be established by checking your data book.  Calculate your windage for a minimum of three wind speeds at each range.  I will generally run from 5 to 35 miles per hour in 5 mph increments.  When you are finished check the table against your data book numbers.  If there are any major discrepancies you will have to scrap the table and rework it from real world range data.

 

Here’s the factory wind drift chart for Federal .308 168 grain BTHP match with a muzzle velocity of 2600 fps fired at sea level.  Drift is given in inches.

 

                          Wind speed in MPH

                           5               10              15             20             30

Range in yards

100                     0.4            0.8             1.2            1.6            2.4

200                     1.5            3.1             4.6            6.2            9.3

300                     3.7            7.4             11.1          14.8          22.2

400                     6.8            13.6           20.4          27.2          40.8

500                     11.1          22.2           33.3          44.4          66.6

600                     16.1          33.3           49.9          66.6          99.9

700                     23.5          47.1           70.6          94.2          141.

800                     32.0          64.1           96.1          128.          192.

900                      42.1         84.2           126.          168.          253.

1000                    53.8         107.           161.          215.          322.

 

Convert the windage in inches to MOA for each range and wind velocity.  Divide the inches by the range in hundreds of yards (600 yards = 6) to get MOA.  Round your minutes off to the nearest quarter minute for scopes that have quarter minute windage resolution. 

 

For 600 yards the data looks like this;

 Wind speed in MPH                     5               10              15             20             30

Range in yards 600                     2.75          5.5             8.25          11.0          16.75

 

Now plug your MOA into the formula;

 

                                                                                                                          R X W
Range times wind velocity divided by minutes equals       ---------  = C                          your constant.

                                                                                                                          MOA 

 

 

 The data looks like this for each range;

 

Wind speed in MPH                        5               10              15             20             30

Range in yards  600                    10.9           10.9           10.9          10.9          10.7

 

Now for each range add the constants together and divide them by the number of wind speeds your table uses.  Federal used 5 different wind speeds so I would divide the total by 5.  Round this number off to the nearest whole number.  You can round to the nearest half, quarter, or tenth to reduce the error factor but it will make the constants harder to memorize.

 

54.3 / 5 = 10.86 (11)  for 600 yards

 

For federal .308 168 grain BTHP match with a muzzle velocity of 2600 fps fired at sea level the numbers come up thus:

 

C = 13 for 100 to 200 yards

       12 for 300 to 400 yards

       11 for 500 to 600 yards

       10 for 700 to 900 yards

and   9 for 1000 yards

 

Plug your numbers into the Marine formula with the new constants and compare them to your established tables.  You’ll find the error is smaller than you can hold under most field conditions.  For absolute precision you’ll still want to refer to your tables.  Now instead of having to memorize 50 or more wind drift values you can memorize a simple progression of a half dozen or so values.  For fast acquisition of targets of opportunity it’s the way to go.  

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