Brand of ammo

There's usually no shortcut to finding what pellets your gun might prefer. 2 exact same guns might not like the same pellet. Airguns are quirky & finicky a lot of the time. JSB and H&N are 2 quality brands. My suggestion is see if you can get a sampler pack & start the process of finding what's best for your gun. What ARE you shooting (gun), what discipline (competition, hunting, etc.). Stuff like that will determine what pellet also. You've got A LOT to learn!
 
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Most of my guns prefer H&N to JSB pellets but one gun hates them. For a light pellet I would try H&N FTT and a similar weight JSB. For a heavy, I like H&N Baracuda Match but JSB 18s or 25 grain are also worth trying. I try pellets that will shoot 800-900 fps with the tune the gun came with and if that doesn't work, I retune. But on a regulated gun I have better luck when the hammer spring is pretty close to what is required to maximize velocity for the regulator setting. All 4 of my regulated guns needed hammer spring adjustment to do their best.
 
It depends on your budget and your intended purpose. If you are just starting out and you want to save a little dough, it's hard to beat the value of Crosman Premiere Hollow Points. You can usually get a tin of 500 for less than 7 bucks at Walmart. These pellets seem to work well in almost all guns, but they are probably not going to be the best in any gun. Once you get a tin or two under your belt, you might then want to expand to other brands such as H&N and JSB as others have mentioned.
 
You have to just try a bunch. You'll also find a weight range that seems to work best. Some guns are more sensitive to pellet diameter. A pellet guage can be used to sort by diameter. Also don't overlook basic Crosman pellets. They shoot very well in all my springers and gas pistons.

This is something I do for each of my airguns, here's the one I did for my TX200. You'll need a chronograph with a logging app on a smart phone. Scored each pellet based on extreme velocity spread, standard deviation, and group size

View attachment 010423 22 TX200 III test.pdf
 
What brand of ammo do you guys recommend when it comes to .22cal? I am new use the search function, and type in the air rifle/pistol and see what the others have had good luck with. Or there are sample packs that have different grain weights to try. One thing that really helps when asking questions on this forum is to give as much information as to the brand of AG you have, caliber, etc. To the best of your ability. The responses will be more helpful to you. I'm not trying to bash you, but rather help you. Please follow up on the Ammo that you desided on.
 
You have to just try a bunch. You'll also find a weight range that seems to work best. Some guns are more sensitive to pellet diameter. A pellet guage can be used to sort by diameter. Also don't overlook basic Crosman pellets. They shoot very well in all my springers and gas pistons.

This is something I do for each of my airguns, here's the one I did for my TX200. You'll need a chronograph with a logging app on a smart phone. Scored each pellet based on extreme velocity spread, standard deviation, and group size

View attachment 320491
So if I am reading your spreadsheet correctly your best pellet is the FX and the worst is the JSB?
 
So if I am reading your spreadsheet correctly your best pellet is the FX and the worst is the JSB?
Yep, them's the numbers. With that said I suspect that the TX200 is not optimally shooting based on ES and SD data compared to what should be expected. I have a Vortek kit on the work bench. After install and break in will run the exercise again and report back.