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See that gray ring around the first baffle? See how close it is to the face of the muzzle? There is nowhere for that initial blast of air to go, and in my theory it was destabilizing the pellet.
Put it on three different guns and neither were as accurate with it on. I put it in the lathe and bored out the first baffle to muzzle diameter. Fixed it on all three guns. Another issue is the thread tolerance on this are floppy loose. Looser than all the other moderators I've owned.
When I threaded the barrel on my HW100 I used the Tanto for my fit check, since it was going to stay on it, and none of my other mods will even go on the threads.
Putting an oring between the moderator and barrel face will destroy the only thing that keeps the moderator square to the bore. The interface of where the rear of the moderator meets the square face of the rear of the threads ensures all is square. Loose andfloppy threads can cause a loss of concentricity. Hence the reason for fitting the threads to the Tanto when I cut them in. Later on if I want to use a different mod, I'll have to chuck the barrel back up and cut them deeper to fit the new one. IMO it's the best way to make sure everything is lined up the best it can be.
Do you agree the only way to fix this kind of issue to guarantee harmonics and air blast uneven turbulence nonconcentricity or whatever etc can only be fixed is to permanently epoxy the LDC onto the gun and keep it specific to that gun? The worlds best airgun tuner threw that one at me before when discussing ultimate accuracy. Yo!
You know AZ actually epoxies each and every single baffle exit hole perfectly concentric to your specific gun bore? Lines up templates takes some shots then builds them baffles and positions all of them perfect? He never believes in thread on LDCs. Perfect world if he did them fatter and shorter rather than having them extended into the next county. Yo!
Great advice. But I'm curious to why this doesn't happen every shot? Could it really the pellets?
That was discussed earlier. It isn’t solely the spin rate. It is a combination of the spin rate and imperfections in the pellets. We can sort pellets and try to minimize those imperfections but they are always present to varying degrees, thus if we want to further minimize the incidence of spiraling, we have to look elsewhere.
This logic can be taken to the extreme to point out we don’t need rifled barrels if our pellets are perfect.