Bull drop
Myhuntingear.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com, amazon.ca, amazon.co.uk and any other website that may be affiliated with Amazon Service LLC Associates Program.
Bull drop
The only thing better than having a beautiful well-made knife is having a knife that is perfect for … [Read More. ]
The .270 and the .30-06 are the two most popular big-game cartridges among American hunters, and the … [Read More. ]
Access Denied — Sucuri Website Firewall
If you are the site owner (or you manage this site), please whitelist your IP or if you think this block is an error please open a support ticket and make sure to include the block details (displayed in the box below), so we can assist you in troubleshooting the issue.
Your IP: | 185.204.24.170 |
URL: | bullbbq.com/product/angus/&rut=3a23f9a18061c02e1464a8b0b7dac591c5be9a256ae0fd9e659165cc63a9ddbe |
Your Browser: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/27.0.1453.90 Safari/537.36 |
Block ID: | EVA120 |
Block reason: | An attempt to evade and bypass security filters was detected. |
Time: | 2024-10-08 02:14:44 |
Server ID: | 15017 |
© 2024 Sucuri Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy
62mm 100yd
Drag Function: G1 Ballistic Coefficient: .475 Bullet Weight: 168 gr Initial Velocity: 2700 fps Sight Height : 1.5 in Shooting Angle: 0° | Wind Speed: 0 mph Wind Angle: 90° Zero Range: 100 yd Chart Range: 200 yd Maximum Range: 5900 yd Step Size: 20 yd | International Standard Atmosphere Altitude: Sea Level (0 ft) Barometric Pressure: 29.92 Hg Temperature: 59° F Relative Humidity: 50% Speed of Sound: 1116 fps |
Drag Function: G1 Ballistic Coefficient: .475 Bullet Weight: 168 gr Initial Velocity: 2700 fps Sight Height : 1.5 in Shooting Angle: 0° | Wind Speed: 0 mph Wind Angle: 90° Zero Range: 200 yd Chart Range: 200 yd Maximum Range: 5898 yd Step Size: 20 yd | International Standard Atmosphere Altitude: Sea Level (0 ft) Barometric Pressure: 29.92 Hg Temperature: 59° F Relative Humidity: 50% Speed of Sound: 1116 fps |
The bull market is nearing its second birthday. Here’s why it will likely continue.
By Joseph Adinolfi Most bull markets since the end of World War II that have lasted at least two years have continued through year three The bull market in U.S. stocks is about to turn two years old, the latest milestone for a rally that has surpassed the expectations of all but the most bullish investors on Wall Street. The S&P 500 SPX has climbed more than 60% since Oct. 12, 2022, when the index hit its bear-market closing low of 3,577.03, according to FactSet data. These gains have unfolded much faster than many financial professionals had anticipated, pushing Wall Street firms to repeatedly raise their year-end targets to keep up. See: Why Goldman Sachs has bumped up its S&P 500 target for the third time this year The data paint a picture of a bull market showing few signs of slowing down, even if the path higher has gotten a bit more bumpy over the past three months. The Cboe Volatility Index VIX, known as the VIX or as Wall Street’s «fear gauge,» touched its highest level intraday since March 2020 during a global market meltdown on Aug. 5, according to FactSet data. But the jump in the fear gauge quickly receded as stocks bounced back. A similar slump followed during the first week of September, but that dip also attracted more demand from investors looking to pick up stocks at a discount. Since then, the S&P 500 has capped off its best performance during the first three quarters of the year since the late 1990s. And if it can hold on to its gains until the end of December, it would mark the second straight year in which the S&P 500 has risen by 20% or more — the first time it will have achieved such a feat since 1998, Dow Jones Market Data show. But the potential risks to the rally have multiplied recently. U.S. stocks are currently sitting on valuations that are high relative to history and just shy of their previous peak from late 2021. Geopolitical risks are percolating once again, as renewed conflict between Israel and Iran has pushed crude-oil prices higher and left stock investors on tenterhooks. And as the third-quarter earnings season begins, investors will likely cast a critical eye toward reports from Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (GOOGL) and the other artificial-intelligence «hyperscalers» for any clues about how long it might take for these companies’ massive investments in AI technology to pay off. Later on, same investors will get a look at earnings from Nvidia Corp. (NVDA). When the company reported its last round of results in August, those results, although strong, weren’t strong enough to boost shares. Finally, the U.S. election on Nov. 5 has many traders buying hedges that would protect their portfolios from any volatility that might result from a race that could come down to the wire and potentially involve a contested result. Because of all this uncertainty, millions of investors around the world are looking for guidance about where the market might be headed next. A team of analysts at Ned Davis Research decided to dig into this question by closely examining how bull runs have fared in the past after making it to their second birthday. They found that, since the end of World War II, there have been 12 bull markets that lasted at least that long. The current one would be the 13th, barring a massive selloff between now and the end of the week. Seven of those made it to the end of their third year, suggesting that the chances that the current bull run will continue are in investors’ favor. The median two-year advance for all 12 runs was 54.4%, according to Ned Davis, which means that the gains that stocks have seen over the past two years actually aren’t that extraordinary relative to history. But going forward, things get a bit murkier. Rallies that made it to their third birthday saw a median gain of 13.3% during their third year, according to the Ned Davis team. Those that didn’t saw a pullback of minus 5.9%. Bull markets don’t die of old age Not a single example from the Ned Davis analysis featured a bull market dying of old age. In every case where the bull market fizzled, the selloff was brought about by one catalyst or another. Recession was the most common, arriving to kill bull markets in their third year on three separate occasions. A fourth example saw the bull market that began in October 1966 killed by the Federal Reserve when the central bank started to tighten monetary policy to fend off a bout of inflation. The fifth example was the bull run that began in March 2009. That time, it was Standard & Poor’s downgrade of the U.S. credit rating, as well as global jitters tied to the European sovereign-debt crisis, that sent stocks sliding. The Ned Davis team expects the current bull run to make it to its third birthday as long as three things go right. First, the disinflationary trend that started in late 2022 must continue. Since the Fed delivered its jumbo interest-rate cut last month, worries about a potential revival of inflation have been creeping back into the market. If investors see concrete signs that inflation has reaccelerated, it could provoke a market tantrum. Second, the Fed must succeed in pulling off a soft landing for the U.S. economy. That means the central bank must thread the needle and deliver slightly slower — but still positive — economic growth while driving inflation back to its 2% target. If a recession begins instead, it would likely send stocks sliding. But the Ned Davis economic team sees few reasons to worry about that right now. Third, the largest U.S. companies must continue to grow their earnings. Wall Street expects earnings growth from the Magnificent Seven — an elite group of megacap companies expected to see substantial benefits from the advent of AI — to slow starting later this year. The rest of the companies in the index will need to pick up the slack, and forecasts suggest this will likely happen. But forecasts are subject to change, and much will ultimately depend on how well the economy holds up between now and this time next year. U.S. stocks are off to a weak start in October, with the S&P 500 down 0.6% since the start of the month, according to data from LSEG. The index stood at 5,729 in early afternoon trading on Monday, down 0.4% on the day. Other major U.S. indexes were not faring much better. The Nasdaq Composite COMP has fallen 0.7% since the start of October and was down 0.3% at 19,474 on Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, meanwhile, has fallen 0.5% in October and was down 225 points, or 0.5%, at 42,125 in recent trading, LSEG data showed. Stocks are said to be in a bull market when an individual stock or index has risen 20% or more from a recent notable low. Conversely, bear markets are defined as a drop of 20% or more from a recent high. -Joseph Adinolfi This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires 10-07-24 1425ET Copyright (c) 2024 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Bad title
The requested page title is invalid. It may be empty, contain unsupported characters, or include a non-local or incorrectly linked interwiki prefix. You may be able to locate the desired page by searching for its name (with the interwiki prefix, if any) in the search box.
Possible causes are:
- an attempt to load a URL such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/| (the | character is unsupported);
- an attempt to load a URL pointing to a «non-local» interwiki page (usually those not run by the Wikimedia Foundation). For example, the URL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/meatball:WikiPedia will give this error, because the «meatball:» interwiki prefix is not marked as local in the interwiki table. Certain interwiki prefixes are marked as local in the table. For example, the URL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/meta:Main_Page can be used to load meta:Main_Page. All interlanguage prefixes are marked as local, and thus URLs such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/fr:Accueil will work as expected. However, non-local interwiki pages can still be accessed by interwiki linking or by entering them in the search box. For example [[meatball:WikiPedia]] can be used on a page, like this: meatball:WikiPedia.
Retrieved from «https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Badtitle»
- Privacy policy
- About Wikipedia
- Disclaimers
- Contact Wikipedia
- Code of Conduct
- Developers
- Statistics
- Cookie statement
- Mobile view
167 Scenar 100 Yd Z
Drag Function: G7 Ballistic Coefficient: 0.216 Bullet Weight: 167 gr Initial Velocity: 2720 fps Sight Height : 1 in Shooting Angle: 0° | Wind Speed: 10 mph Wind Angle: 90° Zero Range: 100 yd Chart Range: 1000 yd Maximum Range: 5301 yd Step Size: 50 yd | International Standard Atmosphere Altitude: Sea Level (0 ft) Barometric Pressure: 29.92 Hg Temperature: 59° F Relative Humidity: 50% Speed of Sound: 1116 fps |
Keep in mind this is an approximation and although it is quite accurate it should never replace first-hand experience of shooting your specific firearm and ammunition to determine the bullet drop and windage at different ranges and conditions. To make it as accurate as possible, it is important that you input the most accurate information that represents shooting conditions, your firearm, and cartridge. The two most important variables are the Initial Velocity and the Ballistic Coefficient. If you do not have a Shooting Chronograph , I strongly suggest you purchase one. It is a great investment if you want to get into long range shooting and will be especially useful if you handload.
I want this to be the best ballistic trajectory calculator out there. Please let me know how it can be improved upon. You can find an email form and contact information here. Thank you.
Copyright © 2024 ShootersCalculator.com
ALL rights reserved.
Spitzer
The Spitzer is a very popular and aerodynamic bullet shape. This bullet is also called a spire point bullet by some people. The Spitzer has a BC modifier of 1.642 making it the 2nd best of the 5 in terms of it’s ability to travel through time and space. There are also spitzer boattails. which gets a bit confusing in terms of generic BC values. If your bullet look like a sptizer but has a boattail (slanted end) then choose the Boattail from the form above.
The boattail is a modification to the rear end of a bullet making the projectile much more air resistent. It has a BC modifier of 1.965 and this number is for a Boattail Spitzer and not a Boattail hollow point. The Boattail hollow point has a much lower BC modifier of somewhere around 1.6
Access Denied — Sucuri Website Firewall
If you are the site owner (or you manage this site), please whitelist your IP or if you think this block is an error please open a support ticket and make sure to include the block details (displayed in the box below), so we can assist you in troubleshooting the issue.
Your IP: | 185.204.24.170 |
URL: | bullbbq.com/&rut=78fadf828d5327099d81036c6bdf6cfac34505a43256f722c8322f38c6b1db93 |
Your Browser: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.2) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/28.0.1467.0 Safari/537.36 |
Block ID: | EVA120 |
Block reason: | An attempt to evade and bypass security filters was detected. |
Time: | 2024-10-08 02:15:10 |
Server ID: | 15017 |
© 2024 Sucuri Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy
Join Our Newsletter
ShootersCalculator.com is in the process of being massively overhauled. The following improvements will be made:
- Mobile Friendly
- Performance Enhancements
- Exportable/Printable Charts
- Metric Unit Support
Please sign up for our newsletter so that you can be alerted the moment these new features are launched!
The email address you entered is not valid.
Your information will never be shared and you can unsubscribe with one click at anytime.
Источники:
https://myhuntingear.com/interactive-ballistics-data/&rut=a2568ce23f2b7fe07a5f3db5e496f7df03aeab9bdc70004843320b4c51208121
https://bullbbq.com/product/angus/&rut=3a23f9a18061c02e1464a8b0b7dac591c5be9a256ae0fd9e659165cc63a9ddbe
https://shooterscalculator.com/ballistic-trajectory-chart.php?t=820cb410&rut=f82ee8b3974d5530fadae5e2e1dd1908cc36aa1ee04060f2922c71a52422f78e
https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241007135/the-bull-market-is-nearing-its-second-birthday-heres-why-it-will-likely-continue&rut=5b8d1eed21638315aa631cb7f1e2a4ec344f5ff3e668aefedb6694b1d733dbdb
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_ballistics&rut=61c0ca1bb9f808b79c8d4b00b927e2586369c9a86512f79bc759c9c6e30e6da1
https://shooterscalculator.com/ballistic-trajectory-chart.php?t=ca4f5dfd&rut=679ba270ccafbbc5cad1f7ab034b5f5c1b8af92dcf8d0c4e0f2875a88b23e727
http://gundata.org/ballistic-calculator/&rut=0444e87425cdc51d744e5ce0831dd4ab8843b88ef6545c8c2583fad1c1a5c430
https://bullbbq.com/&rut=78fadf828d5327099d81036c6bdf6cfac34505a43256f722c8322f38c6b1db93
https://shooterscalculator.com/ballistic-trajectory-chart.php?t=f630255c&rut=75afa6213230a29ff2e0c0329ee05d2e7cc60f9a807453c8307b443c4b7f7a62