Ballistics Coefficient is a product of velocity
BC is a product of mass, diameter , surface area and surface condition.
Surface area and surface condition do not equate to drag coefficient. Drag coefficient is a product of velocity. Most bullet manufacturers use standardized drag models when calculating their stated BC and most are averages. I think only Sierra lists different BC's for different velocities, and not on all bullets.
Getting off track.
Crunchy: I use chrono data as a check for consistency in my loads (ES AND SD) and use the average velocity as a starting point for trajectory. A standard deviation of 50 is pretty high. Make sure you charges and seating depth (measured from the ogive) are consistent. When i was tuning the load for my 308 i kept getting fairly large SD's and ended up changing primers.