Organic Reactive Targets
- By mr. earl
- General Discussion
- 3 Replies
Good idea, but I shot the last two yesterday. I will try that with the green tomatoes when they are done.Earl,
How about if you freeze the squash a bit?
Upvote 0
Good idea, but I shot the last two yesterday. I will try that with the green tomatoes when they are done.Earl,
How about if you freeze the squash a bit?
I just picked up a new FX Impact M3 in 30 cal and it came tuned from Utah air guns. After fiddling with it and watching the tune videos I spent some time chronographping and tuning for efficiency. Long story short , after tuning to 50 yards with jsb 44.75 pellets I tried a few of the fx hybrid slugs. The slugs were several inches right of the pellets but were within an inch. I thought that’s pretty good and left it at that. I plan on being mostly a pellet shooter but thought it was worth a comment on the subject. My shooting buddy gave me the hybrid slugs since his older impact wouldn’t group with them.hi everyone
since the valve is a big factor regarding the tuning process of the fx impact
can i tune the gun for slugs and pellets at the same time?
for example the hammer wheel on 10 for jsb 34 gets me 920 and 14 gets me 960 on HN 36 gr slugs
OR do you think valve opening and closing will be an issue regarding accuracy while tuning for both ?
I cut it in 1/2 and fitted it to cover the plenum extesionsAfter the bottle-swap, what are you doing with the handguard?
Oh yea for sure. I was just responding to the other guy. I just ordered since 210gr .51 from TPP that I be testing this weekThe .50 cal uses .495 diameter slugs and the .51 is .510. Check out Texoma precision pellets they are pretty good
Interesting thought. I wouldn’t hesitate to try them but I want them all lead.Interesting experiences. Elmer Kieth (credited with the invention of the 44 magnum) liked hard cast flat nosed bullets. Sort of like a semi wadcutter. He was hunting with his big pistols but speeds are reasonably similar to airgun velocity. I wonder if a flat nosed slug wouldn't work better at least for larger animals than the hollow points that seem to predominate. Deep penetration but with more of a blow than a round nosed bullet.
I will check out the Trijicon, thx.Yes, I have tried several scopes and dots. Currently, on my .GK1 22 Shorty, I have a zero-power vector with a chevron. For my shorty, which I always use as a pistol, I like the 1moa Trijicon best. But the vector chevron is much clearer for my eyes as it has a diopter. The issue with the zero-power vector is that the image looks smaller when viewed through it compared to the naked eye. But to be honest, when I am hunting squirrels, even with a pistol, I like some magnification.
Im running 22cal. Im going to try a few more things. Been mining information from as many people as I can so I can give it a try.I had the exact same problem with my .25 RAW with the same JSB pellets, just could never get it to group as good as I thought it should. I switched to a .22 caliber since I am only shooting at 50 yards max and the groups are much better. I bought a bunch of different pellets to try out and hopefully will get to testing soon.
Well, first off, 3000 psi is only 207 bar, so if you are trying to fill a 250 bar gun from that you are way short to start with . . . 250 bar is 3625 psi (~14.5 psi per bar). You say you have a 45 minute tank, and those are almost always fill to a max of 4500 psi / 310 bar. But if your tank is not full and only at 3000 psi, then you can't fill even to that level when you add a reservoir to it that is below that level.Not to hack or steal thread. This is wat im wondering too. But from 45min tank at 3000psi. And to fill a gun, (not tank) to 3000psi/250 bar. How many fills can i expect to get. I ask because i tried to fill a hatsan jet2 (250bar) with a .45l bottle (250 bar) And it didnt even fill it due to same max pressure. I was hoping at least 1 fill. But didnt.