.177 vs .22 is that possible?

If you have two tabs selected with the second being the one compared to the first, under the Configuration options, click on 'Compare Trajectory' Mode then select 'Same barrel angle'. This should show what the second gun would do assuming the same barrel angle is used. I found it really interesting when comparing different weight pellets assuming that no horizontal changes in impact was a factor.
 
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"thwakkk"If you have two tabs selected with the second being the one compared to the first, under the Configuration options, click on 'Compare Trajectory' Mode then select 'Same barrel angle'. This should show what the second gun would do assuming the same barrel angle is used. I found it really interesting when comparing different weight pellets assuming that no horizontal changes in impact was a factor.
Accuracy given...
 
".177"So that means the .177 dont shots that low on 10 yards?
How that looks if you set this in Chairgun?
At ten yards your pellet is still rising to line of sight. Scope height matters in this situation, so you have to set both scope heights to the same to get a valid comparison at 10 yards. First zero point also makes a difference. Your pellet leaves the barrel and rises to the line of sight at your first zero point. If that zero point is a long ways out there then the pellet will remain below line of sight until it gets there. Also remember that a mildot at 10 yards is only .36 inches so being a mildot low at ten yards is only a third of an inch low. Chairgun is a great learning tool; however, you must figure out why it tells you what it tells you if you want to learn from it.