Indoors..the one in the best shooters hands.As an extreme, if you had 2 similar guns of the same make, one with power adjusted to the limit and one restricted to under 6 ft-lbs, which one do you think would be the most accurate over a short distance?
I cannot agree with this as I had a 177 Titan Manitou set up for bell target at 6fpe which from a bench rest would put the pellet cleanly through the 10mm hole every time at 15 yds. When it was reinstated to 11fpe for hunting it was shot at the bell target from the same range, same sights and I found although the pellet went through the hole many of the shots clipped the edge of the hole and left a grey smudge, yet at 30 yds it produced nice cloverleaf groups. In this trial, the 6fpe version of the gun proved to be most accurate at around 560fps rather than at 780fps.Indoors..the one in the best shooters hands.
Outdoors in real weather? The well set up sub12.
It is not unknown for powder burners to give tighter groups at 100 yards than they do at 50, and suspicion falls on spiralling.I cannot agree with this as I had a 177 Titan Manitou set up for bell target at 6fpe which from a bench rest would put the pellet cleanly through the 10mm hole every time at 15 yds. When it was reinstated to 11fpe for hunting it was shot at the bell target from the same range, same sights and I found although the pellet went through the hole many of the shots clipped the edge of the hole and left a grey smudge, yet at 30 yds it produced nice cloverleaf groups. In this trial, the 6fpe version of the gun proved to be most accurate at around 560fps rather than at 780fps.
I can prove itI cannot agree with this as I had a 177 Titan Manitou set up for bell target at 6fpe which from a bench rest would put the pellet cleanly through the 10mm hole every time at 15 yds. When it was reinstated to 11fpe for hunting it was shot at the bell target from the same range, same sights and I found although the pellet went through the hole many of the shots clipped the edge of the hole and left a grey smudge, yet at 30 yds it produced nice cloverleaf groups. In this trial, the 6fpe version of the gun proved to be most accurate at around 560fps rather than at 780fps.
Not uncommon by all accounts with the boys slinging slugs(not pellets) at higher powers, I guess as they share similar ballistic traits as bullets it could be a thingIt is not unknown for powder burners to give tighter groups at 100 yards than they do at 50, and suspicion falls on spiralling.
Perhaps @Ballisticboy could offer some of his wisdom on the theory.
Will be interesting following your progress.... I went to the expense and time to build a test rig along similar lines to what the olympic teams use for batch testing pellets.
I'm certainly not accurate enough to match or better the dispersion of the 9015 but also now have benchmarks and have an average measurement of my own natural wobbles and how that effects my groups....
It's super interesting and once I got a handle on how to get the rig set up ,will be invaluable going forward for myself and for all of us,as I'll share all the findings.
Same pellets ? Different bullets " go to sleep" @ differing distances @ different velocity.I cannot agree with this as I had a 177 Titan Manitou set up for bell target at 6fpe which from a bench rest would put the pellet cleanly through the 10mm hole every time at 15 yds. When it was reinstated to 11fpe for hunting it was shot at the bell target from the same range, same sights and I found although the pellet went through the hole many of the shots clipped the edge of the hole and left a grey smudge, yet at 30 yds it produced nice cloverleaf groups. In this trial, the 6fpe version of the gun proved to be most accurate at around 560fps rather than at 780fps.
Crikey Bill you got nothing to do mateSome threads worth reading if you want more understanding of the factors influencing consistency of trajectories:
This is my first post in this forum and I just wanted to let you know that it's long and technical. However, the ideas are fairly basic and the most of the story is told by the figures. I learned a lot in the process of writing this post and hope that you find the long slog through it interesting and perhaps even enlightening!
My job as an experimental physicist is to come up with new measurements to observe phenomena that are hard to see. This gives us new insights and a better understanding of how the world works. The same can be applied to spring piston airguns, which can be very...
- JohnFT
- Replies: 19
- Forum: Anything Airgun Related
A short while ago, I started looking at the problems with firing pellets at high speeds and long ranges. The data was all at FAC level speeds, where there are known difficulties from pellet spiralling. Having produced a lengthy thread on some US forums showing tendencies for spiralling, I have gone on to see what happens at sub 12 FPE speeds, specifically in .177 calibre.
The pellet I have chosen is the JSB 10.34 grain Heavy pellet. This is not because the JSB pellet is particularly bad, it is just because I happen to have more data on that than I do on most other pellets. A .22 scaled up...
- Ballisticboy
- Replies: 95
- Forum: Anything Airgun Related
Following some recent threads, I thought this post from the previous forum may be of interest or use in helping to understand why lead free pellets seem to be so much less accurate than their lead equivalents. I used tin for the modelling, but zinc pellets would give much the same result, as the densities of tin and zinc are very close to each other compared to lead.
I have been carrying out a bit of simulation of tin pellets based on two current lead pellet designs in .177. The two designs chosen are the 8.4 grain AA Field pellet and the early JSB Heavy pellet with the cylindrical...
- Ballisticboy
- Replies: 15
- Forum: Anything Airgun Related
Looking at comments in some of the recent posts regarding the way pellets are stabilized, I thought I would reproduce this thread from the old forum to try to clear up some misapprehensions.
In a video by one of the leading YouTube air rifle video producers, he went to great lengths to explain pellet aerodynamic stability and how it differs from slugs. Unfortunately, he just repeated everything else which has been said before. Fig 1 below is close to one of his main diagrams and is typical of many diagrams used to explain drag stability on pellets.
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Fig 1
The claim is that...
- Ballisticboy
- Replies: 40
- Forum: Anything Airgun Related
It's easier for most of us to find a pellet which suits the gun than tuning a gun to a specific pellet. Anti-tamper devices restrict simple power adjustment and changing MV. Even with ATs removed it's often more complicated than changing one parameter due to Interdependencies and the need to balance different settings. Apart from fixing weights on the barrel, most other changes require disassembly, reassembly and testing, which are extremely time consuming.
Some light reading for anyone who can't get to sleep.Crikey Bill you got nothing to do mate![]()
Thats exactly why I tune my rifles clamped solid with a couple of clocks on them . the tuning then consists of eliminating the vibrations generated by the moving parts which transfer and create the barrel harmonic wave . tiz very simple logic .Will be interesting following your progress.
One thing you might consider is the dissipation of excess energy through the action and mountings: whether the rigid mounting causes additional vibration in the barrel. Intuitively, I think a damped linear bearing might produce tighter groups. It would be interesting to measure movement in the barrel, perhaps by dial gauges or high speed photography?
As fascinating as I find your technical posts Bill, they are way above my pay grade/understanding! I often have to coerce my brain to crawl back into its box from my shoulder!!Some light reading for anyone who can't get to sleep.![]()
Sometimes mate i simplifie things by making rifles do bad things. it makes it much easier to figure out the whys. wheres and how to's.As fascinating as I find your technical posts Bill, they are way above my pay grade/understanding! I often have to coerce my brain to crawl back into its box from my shoulder!!![]()
I know you are tuning the action to minimise vibrations which would otherwise induce harmonic waves in the barrel. I'm not clear on what you are doing to change the harmonics of the barrel - amplitude, frequency and position of nodes - and how these are linked to choice of pellet. My question is to what extent you are tuning the rifle generally rather than to a specific pellet?Thats exactly why I tune my rifles clamped solid with a couple of clocks on them . the tuning then consists of eliminating the vibrations generated by the moving parts which transfer and create the barrel harmonic wave . tiz very simple logic .
then when you take the rifle out of the clamps there is next to no harmonic wave and especially that will affect a 16mm barrel
I got the idea from shooting my springers where different holds change the way the rifle reacts . hence the clamping amplifys everything in the pcp so i can see it and sort it .
absolutely mate. Currently it's affixed to the laminate mounting block exactly as the action sits in the current highest scoring 9015 in European world rules bench rest. Matt at airabilityWill be interesting following your progress.
One thing you might consider is the dissipation of excess energy through the action and mountings: whether the rigid mounting causes additional vibration in the barrel. Intuitively, I think a damped linear bearing might produce tighter groups. It would be interesting to measure movement in the barrel, perhaps by dial gauges or high speed photography?
Well, mine should definitely help insomnia sufferers.Some light reading for anyone who can't get to sleep.![]()