Hello AirgunNation Peoples
,
This post ainât about slugs or 100+ yard shooting. Itâs about good olâ Diabolo pellets. Namely, JSB .22 caliber Jumbo Heavy 18.13 grain and JSB .25 caliber King Heavy 33.95 grain. Everybody whoâs anybody in the airgun world seems to follow or believe in the commonly known theory that the top most stable velocity for Diabolo pellets is around 860 to 880 fps. It sounds like a skipping record to my ears:
âYou canât shoot Diabolo pellets beyond 880 ft./s or youâll lose everythingâ.
âDiabolo pellets lose their stability if shot faster than 880 ft./sâ
âDiabolo shaped pellets will begin to wobble and veer out of control if shot beyond a certain speed. All accuracy will be lostâ.
âThey may be stable at high velocities out to 25 or 30 yards but beyond that they will lose stabilityâ.
You get the point. All of my PCPâs are power tuned to the mid-900âs and I get good groups and out to 75 yards I rarely miss shots on game. I am at least a 90% kill rate. Misses usually are due to the quarry moving, matrix-ing me, wind, or something I did wrong not an effect of a unstable pellet. Never noticed stability issues.
So, since my FX Crown .25, Wildcat MKIII Sniper .25, and Dreamline-Bullpup .22 caliber are easily power adjustable, âclick-clickâ on the adjusters and I am shooting @ 860 to 880 fps, and again âclick-click-clickâ at the mid-900âs. Figured I would test the stability at those different speeds at 50 and 75 yards with some five shot groups.
The PCPâs and the Heavy Diabolo pellets
About the PCPâs
Ideal Speed Tune
Hot Tune
Ideal Speed Tune
Hot Tune
Ideal Speed Tune
Hot Tune
The range, the wind, and the shootingÂ
Targets, target close ups, and group breakdowns
50 yards (left to right: Crown, Dreamline, Wildcat)
75 yards (left to right: Crown, Dreamline, Wildcat)
Dreamline Bullpup .22
No stability issues here.
No stability issues here.
Wildcat MKIII .25
No stability issues here.
Here on the lower group @ 960 fps I botched one shot high because I forgot my hold over. I mistakenly held 1.5 mils when the holdover was only 1Â mil. Messed up what was going to be a fine group! Still, no stability issues here.
Crown .25
No stability issues here.
For the FX Crown, it was one of those not the greatest 75 yard group days. Itâs done and I have shot better groups with it, even @ 100 yards. Not the greatest or tightest groups, but they are honest. Maybe my eyes are bad and not as well trained as the next guys, but I see no POI or evidence of a lack of stability between any of the groups. They all seem to be comparable in size??
Conclusion
In my PCPâs I cannot see a difference in performance if shooting at the sacred 860 to 880 fps versus my preferred 950 to 960 fps. What I do see is a gentler recoil per shot and efficiency or shot count increases when shooting on lower power settings. On the higher power level I see flatter trajectories and more energy down range, which I prefer for hunting. Also, like I hinted at above slightly more hold sensitivity. I am not a competitive airgun shooter but I could understand that the gentler recoil of a 860 to 880 fps PCP could make it easier to consistently shoot small groups. But from my airguns and for their uses, âIdealâ velocities versus âHotâ velocities have no edge one over the other. Please share your comments, thoughts, and experiences?
Thanks,
JoeKool

This post ainât about slugs or 100+ yard shooting. Itâs about good olâ Diabolo pellets. Namely, JSB .22 caliber Jumbo Heavy 18.13 grain and JSB .25 caliber King Heavy 33.95 grain. Everybody whoâs anybody in the airgun world seems to follow or believe in the commonly known theory that the top most stable velocity for Diabolo pellets is around 860 to 880 fps. It sounds like a skipping record to my ears:
âYou canât shoot Diabolo pellets beyond 880 ft./s or youâll lose everythingâ.
âDiabolo pellets lose their stability if shot faster than 880 ft./sâ
âDiabolo shaped pellets will begin to wobble and veer out of control if shot beyond a certain speed. All accuracy will be lostâ.
âThey may be stable at high velocities out to 25 or 30 yards but beyond that they will lose stabilityâ.
You get the point. All of my PCPâs are power tuned to the mid-900âs and I get good groups and out to 75 yards I rarely miss shots on game. I am at least a 90% kill rate. Misses usually are due to the quarry moving, matrix-ing me, wind, or something I did wrong not an effect of a unstable pellet. Never noticed stability issues.
So, since my FX Crown .25, Wildcat MKIII Sniper .25, and Dreamline-Bullpup .22 caliber are easily power adjustable, âclick-clickâ on the adjusters and I am shooting @ 860 to 880 fps, and again âclick-click-clickâ at the mid-900âs. Figured I would test the stability at those different speeds at 50 and 75 yards with some five shot groups.
The PCPâs and the Heavy Diabolo pellets
About the PCPâs
Ideal Speed Tune
Hot Tune
Ideal Speed Tune
Hot Tune
Ideal Speed Tune
Hot Tune
The range, the wind, and the shootingÂ
Targets, target close ups, and group breakdowns
50 yards (left to right: Crown, Dreamline, Wildcat)
75 yards (left to right: Crown, Dreamline, Wildcat)
Dreamline Bullpup .22


Wildcat MKIII .25


Crown .25


Conclusion
In my PCPâs I cannot see a difference in performance if shooting at the sacred 860 to 880 fps versus my preferred 950 to 960 fps. What I do see is a gentler recoil per shot and efficiency or shot count increases when shooting on lower power settings. On the higher power level I see flatter trajectories and more energy down range, which I prefer for hunting. Also, like I hinted at above slightly more hold sensitivity. I am not a competitive airgun shooter but I could understand that the gentler recoil of a 860 to 880 fps PCP could make it easier to consistently shoot small groups. But from my airguns and for their uses, âIdealâ velocities versus âHotâ velocities have no edge one over the other. Please share your comments, thoughts, and experiences?
Thanks,
JoeKool