Pellet Preparation

Pellets can be,
Washed and dried
Sorted visually
Sorted by weight
Sort by head size
Resized for head and skirt
Rolled on a incline
Lubricated

As far as I know, all of these are acceptable for completion.
Is there any official limit to allowed pellet preparation?

For example can you,
Paint pellets
Powder coat pellets
Etc.
 
Pellets can be,
Washed and dried
Sorted visually
Sorted by weight
Sort by head size
Resized for head and skirt
Rolled on a incline
Lubricated

As far as I know, all of these are acceptable for completion.
Is there any official limit to allowed pellet preparation?

For example can you,
Paint pellets
Powder coat pellets
Etc.
That’s an interesting question. One of those things that won’t be a rule till someone wins doing it.
 
@Iowa Airgunner, Achieving consistent changes wouldn't be easy. I am look at this as "out of box" possibilities if allowed. First step, I though, was to see if anyone knows where the boundary might be. Your comment about "wouldn't be a rule until someone wins" sound much like motor sports, specifically F1. If a team comes up with major new technology that leaves everyone else in the dust, that tech quickly gets banned. I am not sure if that applies to airgun? Thank you for your input.
 
The closest thing to competition I do is the 30 yard challenge. I am not great but I have shot a few 200s, the goal. I've tried most of those steps but I did not find any difference in my scores. I find checking head size variation in a tin of pellets is useful when they do not seem to shoot well. Often I find high variability in the head size. But when I try sorting that tin it doesn't "fix it". I think the head size variability is not the real issue, it is something about how the pellets were formed. I find enough "junk" in empty tins of Crosman pellets to make me think they could use a wash. But I doubt it would turn them into top quality target pellets. My 200s have been with pellets straight from the tin and normally through a magazine. I might have used a single pellet loader on one of the most recent. I prefer printed magazines, however, I think there is less chance of pellet damage.

What does make a noticable difference is finding a pellet your gun "likes". For instance my P35-22 likes H&N Baracuda 21 grain Match pellets and I shot a 200 with this gun and pellet. But it required a lot of attempts, dozens. This year I tried AEA 21.9 grain pellets and the second target I shot with them was a 200. I've shot a bunch of lower scores now but the gun likes them better than the H&Ns. I don't know if they are made better or it's just a gun preference thing. But I'm happy I tried the AEA pellets. The AEA 18.3 grain is my Bullsharks favorite but my Caiman still likes the H&N 18 grain Baracudas better. That makes me think it is probably a gun preference thing. This is with the same tune of the gun for both pellets. The weights are similar and while I've tried small changes to make a pellet shoot better once I have a good tune a minor change in the pellet doesn't seem to mean I need a new tune.

Maybe if I shot better or shot at longer range I would see a benefit in some of the pellet preparation steps. But I think the most important step is still finding the best pellet for your gun.
 
The closest thing to competition I do is the 30 yard challenge. I am not great but I have shot a few 200s, the goal. I've tried most of those steps but I did not find any difference in my scores. I find checking head size variation in a tin of pellets is useful when they do not seem to shoot well. Often I find high variability in the head size. But when I try sorting that tin it doesn't "fix it". I think the head size variability is not the real issue, it is something about how the pellets were formed. I find enough "junk" in empty tins of Crosman pellets to make me think they could use a wash. But I doubt it would turn them into top quality target pellets. My 200s have been with pellets straight from the tin and normally through a magazine. I might have used a single pellet loader on one of the most recent. I prefer printed magazines, however, I think there is less chance of pellet damage.

What does make a noticable difference is finding a pellet your gun "likes". For instance my P35-22 likes H&N Baracuda 21 grain Match pellets and I shot a 200 with this gun and pellet. But it required a lot of attempts, dozens. This year I tried AEA 21.9 grain pellets and the second target I shot with them was a 200. I've shot a bunch of lower scores now but the gun likes them better than the H&Ns. I don't know if they are made better or it's just a gun preference thing. But I'm happy I tried the AEA pellets. The AEA 18.3 grain is my Bullsharks favorite but my Caiman still likes the H&N 18 grain Baracudas better. That makes me think it is probably a gun preference thing. This is with the same tune of the gun for both pellets. The weights are similar and while I've tried small changes to make a pellet shoot better once I have a good tune a minor change in the pellet doesn't seem to mean I need a new tune.

Maybe if I shot better or shot at longer range I would see a benefit in some of the pellet preparation steps. But I think the most important step is still finding the best pellet for your gun.
Blabba, blah, blabba, blabba,......
...."most important step is still finding the best pellet for your gun."

And you still didn't address the OP 😆 😆 🤣