Not really your original question but some things to think about.
How did you get your velocity? Chronograph or estimated based off a box of ammo?
The easiest way to get accurate data, would be to sight in at 200 yards, then shoot groups at 400+ yards without touching the dial. Measure up from your group to your point of aim. Use that real world number as trajectory.
Mess with the numbers in your ballistic calculator, like B/C (these are often inflated values) and velocity (depending on where you got your 2960 number) until you get a match on the ballistic calculator to match real world drops that you shot. This is easiest if you shoot a couple groups at different distances. Say at 400 yards, and 600 yards. That way you can match your ballistic calculator info at both 400 and 600 yards for trajectory.
Another thing to check is what (measurement) each click is in your scope ends up being. A lot of times they end up not being precisely .25 more like .257 or something like that, which will show at longer range.