Agree, but one needs to be diligent in learning the skill, or poorly hit animals pay the price.Well that’s part of fun and challenge of low power airgun, it’s a great skill.
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Agree, but one needs to be diligent in learning the skill, or poorly hit animals pay the price.Well that’s part of fun and challenge of low power airgun, it’s a great skill.
I thought my back yard set-up was "neighborhood friendly", I was wrong. My wife heard me dispatch a squirrel and said it "sounded like a gun". I'm shooting a 22 Dreamline, pushing out Hades pellets at 890fps. I'm pretty sure what she heard is the pellet hitting the "target". It make a pretty decent "pop" when a squirrel takes one to the noggin.
My only experience with 0.177 is with a springer which makes enough noise its difficult to tell how much noise the pellet strike makes.
My question for the Airgun Nation: are 0.177's quieter than 0.22's? Will they reduce the noise of the pellet strike on small pests? Thanks.
A lot depends on the speed of the pellet and how much air your gun is wasting, cloud cover and nearby reflective surfaces matter as well.I thought my back yard set-up was "neighborhood friendly", I was wrong. My wife heard me dispatch a squirrel and said it "sounded like a gun". I'm shooting a 22 Dreamline, pushing out Hades pellets at 890fps. I'm pretty sure what she heard is the pellet hitting the "target". It make a pretty decent "pop" when a squirrel takes one to the noggin.
My only experience with 0.177 is with a springer which makes enough noise its difficult to tell how much noise the pellet strike makes.
My question for the Airgun Nation: are 0.177's quieter than 0.22's? Will they reduce the noise of the pellet strike on small pests? Thanks.
You kind of lost me on those last two variables, but yes, tuning efficiency is a definite noise factor.A lot depends on the speed of the pellet and how much air your gun is wasting, cloud cover and nearby reflective surfaces matter as well.
Any reflective surface, including clouds will create more intense/loud sound / rebound as instead of quickly dissipating sound waves as they spread out omnidirectional they are more focused from point of origin.You kind of lost me on those last two variables, but yes, tuning efficiency is a definite noise factor.
kesTo my ears, the sound of the pellet impacting the squirrel varies a lot. At short range, under 20 yards, the sound of the impact and the sound of the gun seem to blend together. Longer range they are separate but exactly what angle the pellet impacts seems to make a difference. The OP's wife may have noticed one because the squirrel was at just the right angle to the pellet. She might not notice the next one.
My 177 shoots H&N 10.6 about 900 fps so similar to the OP's gun. It is quieter both at the muzzle and at impact than my 22 and 25 caliber guns. My neighbors hear it when I am outside shooting but they don't complain. It's legal where I use and if they are inside my guns are plenty quiet enough they don't here them (about 85db). Pellet impact to a paper target is about 85db, I don't think pellets impacting squirrels is much if any louder.
Yes, but at 50 yards you need to be perfect on your range estimation for a hit. When I had my 12 fpe rifle zeroed at 25, I believe it was 5 or 6 inches low at 50.