Nice to hear someone that spent the $$ and went through the process to get a suppressor on their PB .Ruger RPR Rimfire and any 22 suppressor in the $250 range and it’s money well spent. Ask me how I know.
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Nice to hear someone that spent the $$ and went through the process to get a suppressor on their PB .Ruger RPR Rimfire and any 22 suppressor in the $250 range and it’s money well spent. Ask me how I know.
Your incorrect buddy. Brakes make the sound much louder. A muzzle brake on a .223. I guess the Soyboys can't handle the recoil. It's what they see as Gamers and in the movies. So every one around them puts up with increased noise because that want look like the guys in the games. Muzzle brakes allow you to shoot a larger round and negate part of the recoil. So if your going to hunt say a Brown Bear with a .338 mag it's more manageable for most with the recoil of a 30/06, but at the cost of increased muzzle blast and magnified noise. Guys shoting targets can attempt to fight the wind with power as opposed to a better skill set in reading conditions. Some pb disciplines do not allow brakes.......good for them. The side discharge brakes like on some of the Rugers are particularly loud and annoying. Don't confuse a brske and a surpressor which from the stats I see still require additional ear protectio That vibration you fell going through your body is from the blast generated by the brake. I have seen hats blown off of shooters sitting 8 ft away at the next bench.Guys around here shoot "AR" style looking .223 most i think come with a break which does nothing to the sound . Muzzle breaks only redirect the air away from the projectile .
I have heard that across the pond a lot of places think shooting without a moderator is very rude !Your incorrect buddy. Brakes make the sound much louder. A muzzle brake on a .223. I guess the Soyboys can't handle the recoil. It's what they see as Gamers and in the movies. So every one around them puts up with increased noise because that want look like the guys in the games. Muzzle brakes allow you to shoot a larger round and negate part of the recoil. So if your going to hunt say a Brown Bear with a .338 mag it's more manageable for most with the recoil of a 30/06, but at the cost of increased muzzle blast and magnified noise. Guys shoting targets can attempt to fight the wind with power as opposed to a better skill set in reading conditions. Some pb disciplines do not allow brakes.......good for them. The side discharge brakes like on some of the Rugers are particularly loud and annoying. Don't confuse a brske and a surpressor which from the stats I see still require additional ear protectio That vibration you fell going through your body is from the blast generated by the brake. I have seen hats blown off of shooters sitting 8 ft away at the next bench.
I dropped an 11-12 pound gray fox with an Umarex Komplete .22 shooting 17gr pellets…. From 20y I hit him square in the chest(heart) and the pellet exited near his back left leg. He ran less than 10 yards… Airguns have more than enough power to get the job done. Shot placement and ammo selection are key. I wish I had shot the fox with one of those gamo red fires instead.I’ve said this before and many disagree but I wouldn’t use an airgun for either of those two at all. Assuming you are located remotely I would go with a powder burner, 270, 30/30 or my personal favorite, .308. If you’re on a budget then a bolt action can be scoped and ready at all times for $500-700 very easily.
Rick H.
wouldn't this depend on how much you shoot ? If your just pesting say three nights a week and maybe shooting 5 shots a night ( a 45 shot count ) so 100 strokes of the pump every 3 weeks .I am no super star but I consider myself in fairly decent shape and capable of a full day of hard work but there is no way I am going to rely on hand pumping a pcp, in an emergency ok but as a main source of air its out of the question.
All of this is 100% on point… the wannabe tough guys with their call of duty setupsYou’re incorrect buddy. Brakes make the sound much louder. A muzzle brake on a .223. I guess the Soyboys can't handle the recoil. It's what they see as Gamers and in the movies. So every one around them puts up with increased noise because that want look like the guys in the games. Muzzle brakes allow you to shoot a larger round and negate part of the recoil. So if your going to hunt say a Brown Bear with a .338 mag it's more manageable for most with the recoil of a 30/06, but at the cost of increased muzzle blast and magnified noise. Guys shoting targets can attempt to fight the wind with power as opposed to a better skill set in reading conditions. Some pb disciplines do not allow brakes.......good for them. The side discharge brakes like on some of the Rugers are particularly loud and annoying. Don't confuse a brske and a surpressor which from the stats I see still require additional ear protectio That vibration you fell going through your body is from the blast generated by the brake. I have seen hats blown off of shooters sitting 8 ft away at the next bench.
Come on we all know a pcp and open tin of pellets are like an open bag of potato chips, you can't eat just one. Well maybe for me anyway.wouldn't this depend on how much you shoot ? If your just pesting say three nights a week and maybe shooting 5 shots a night ( a 45 shot count ) so 100 strokes of the pump every 3 weeks .
If you put any stock in across the pond I am very disappointed. We threw them out and kicked their butt over 200 years ago, saved said butts several times since, I for one have no time for them or their thought.......except for the Air Arms folks,lol.I have heard that across the pond a lot of places think shooting without a moderator is very rude !
That’s cool. You were very fortunate to get that angle for the kill shot.I dropped an 11-12 pound gray fox with an Umarex Komplete .22 shooting 17gr pellets…. From 20y I hit him square in the chest(heart) and the pellet exited near his back left leg. He ran less than 10 yards… Airguns have more than enough power to get the job done. Shot placement and ammo selection are key. I wish I had shot the fox with one of those gamo red fires instead.
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No, I am using sub sonic ammo and is as quiet as a .25 PCP.Do you still wear ear protection?
There are no spring guns IMO that can ethically be thought to be useful on a coyote. I have taken coyotes with my .25 M-Rod set to near maximum power, .25, 34 grain pellet at 960 fps which is around 70 fpe and far more than any spring gun can generate.I am looking to get an air rifle for pest control up to the size of foxes or coyotes. I like the idea of a pcp but I don’t have it in the budget to get a big tank or a compressor so I would have to a hand pump. I would need the gun ready for when I needed it, can you leave a pcp charged for an extended period time or would it damage it?
Yes sir that took work! I spent a few nights figuring out exactly which direction he was coming from and then I had to make my own blind using a tent’s green rain fly and some pine boughs… then I had to spend 4 nights freezing my a$$ off hiding in that blind before I got him… definitely a powder burner would have been way easier but even though I live on 6 acres it’s technically still town so no shooting allowed.That’s cool. You were very fortunate to get that angle for the kill shot.
I know, in my experience, you rarely get that opportunity when the critter lines up just right and the crosshairs are on the right spot.
Well done.
You were definitely motivated to eliminate that fox.Yes sir that took work! I spent a few nights figuring out exactly which direction he was coming from and then I had to make my own blind using a tent’s green rain fly and some pine boughs… then I had to spend 4 nights freezing my a$$ off hiding in that blind before I got him… definitely a powder burner would have been way easier but even though I live on 6 acres it’s technically still town so no shooting allowed.
I still agree with your point though. I just wanted to point out that the power level of an airgun is only limiting if you’re not willing to find ways of mitigating that factor.
He was getting into the chicken coop so he had to go… beautiful coat but especially the tail.You were definitely motivated to eliminate that fox.