Only when I quoted your post did my post go up for moderation... I think the 'system' holds random posts for random reasons, there was nothing wrong with your post.Thank you for the info.
My post was held for review by a moderate.
?
Upvote 0
Only when I quoted your post did my post go up for moderation... I think the 'system' holds random posts for random reasons, there was nothing wrong with your post.Thank you for the info.
My post was held for review by a moderate.
?
Very cool and appears to support two things i've been hearing a lot of recently. The poly barrels are amazing and 20cal has a killer BC.< 20fpe BC comparison
@Arzrover did some extensive ballistic coefficient testing and posted his results in the projectiles section. https://www.airgunnation.com/threads/difficult-choices.1282745/ Just wanted to share it here since it's so relevant for field target and perhaps some ft diehards only follow the FT...www.airgunnation.com
No risk at all if max velocity is a few fps below 818 and having a high ES will actually reduce the risk of shooting hot... If your ES is high your average velocity will be much lower than your highest velocity when compared to a lower ES. Since the maximum velocity is several fps below 20 ft-lbs (818.8) you'll never pop over 20 ft-lbs let alone 20+2% unless heat is a factor and then you have 20fps or more to play with.Why risk getting bounced over a few fps?
I cannot tell any difference how my Thomas shoots between 800 and 815 fps.
....The poly barrels are amazing and 20cal has a killer BC.
Too bad the latest LW 20's have been throwing 1" groups at 30 yards.
Wow, a wealth of info here to slowly go thru and digest. I typically just shoot and whichever is the most accurate run with it. I will say, none of my guns will shoot a 13gr pellet to 55yds though. They all spiral and several are well known platforms for others using them.< 20fpe BC comparison
@Arzrover did some extensive ballistic coefficient testing and posted his results in the projectiles section. https://www.airgunnation.com/threads/difficult-choices.1282745/ Just wanted to share it here since it's so relevant for field target and perhaps some ft diehards only follow the FT...www.airgunnation.com
Yep, Thomas #1 with a 15" poly loves the 13.4's at speed, Thomas #293 with an 18" poly loves the 13.4's at a velocity at or below 800 (780) and they start to visually spiral over 820 (at 810 you can see the group size open up).Wow, a wealth of info here to slowly go thru and digest. I typically just shoot and whichever is the most accurate run with it. I will say, none of my guns will shoot a 13gr pellet to 55yds though. They all spiral and several are well known platforms for others using them.
Well i've been shooting FT since 2011 and haven't shot hot yet and most of those years were before the 2% rule using an unregulated USFT.
During that same time I have only seen one chrony be off by more than a few fps and it was a ShootingChrony, it was off by 40fps (it was mine).
I have also seen people shoot too fast and too slow recently because they did not run their rig over the match chrony (or use their own) prior to the event. In fact I saw six people do this at the last event.
Don't worry about my velocity, worry about yours.
Math and science are great and all, but I would encourage you to deviate from the theoretical. Next time your are practicing with some wind, shoot 7.9s, 8.4s, 10.3s and 13.4s at a target. I won't spoil it for you, but you will learn something.Here comes the issue. Why do you say less wind drift? You say heavier pellet at slower speeds has less wind drift vs lighter and faster?
BC calculators say otherwise. There is a point of where the heavier over takes the lighter with wind resistance but the speeds aren't allowed for the class. Ive been told by people with many successful years of experience in this game that the lighter and faster bucks the wind better. Take all small cartridges for example. a 17hmr at 18grains moving 2,500fps has little drift in low winds, enough you dont have to hold much if any vs a .22lr 40gr going 1,050fps at a closer range has way more wind drift. Lots of discussions on this matter out there and people will argue back and fourth all day but when does the math and science take into account?
Curious to understand why 8.4's in PCP WFTF and not 10.34's...Math and science are great and all, but I would encourage you to deviate from the theoretical. Next time your are practicing with some wind, shoot 7.9s, 8.4s, 10.3s and 13.4s at a target. I won't spoil it for you, but you will learn something.
You have control over your vertical hold (if you've done your homework). You don't have control over wind. I'm more confident in my ability to hold 2.5 mil over on a close target than I am in determining if the wind halfway to a long target is 3 mph or 6 mph.
I will always pick the heaviest pellet that a gun will shoot, and if it won't shoot 13.4s, I'll use a gun that will. Unless I'm shooting WFTF or a springer, then it's 8.4 all day.
Mostly because I have 2 sleeves of 8.44, but also because I've shot 8.44 at 12 foot pounds for 10 years, so I'm familiar with the behavior. And I've only had one springer that likes the 10.3s, but I don't shoot that gun very often.Curious to understand why 8.4's in PCP WFTF and not 10.34's...
Why do you say less wind drift?
It would be nice if they hadn't been banned.
Risky business relying on the 2%. It exists because of chrono variation, and variation is something notoriously seen from different chronos, even the same model.
I’ve tested a variety of 10.x gr, 13.4gr and my two 20ft-lb FT rifles prefer 13.4 original monster profile.I've been looking at the equipment used on FT match reports. I'm seeing a big move to the JSB 13.43's.
Can some tell me why are people moving to the 13.43's?
I'd imagine the drop would be larger especially past 50 yards making ranging more critical at that difficult ranging distance. So, what am I missing about the 13.43's?
Also, are the original 13.43's or the redesigns being used, or a mixture?