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Thread: Which 22 pellets for accuracy

  1. #16
    Join Date
    May 2018
    Location
    Dundee
    Posts
    50

    German

    Try RWS pellets, very high quality

  2. #17
    bossmugler is offline More breaking even than breaking bad
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Huyton / Liverpool
    Posts
    263
    I found the accupells and the falcon accuracy gave superb results both in my springer and pcp. The falcon accuracy gave a slightly flatter trajectory due to their lighter weight

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Mar 2018
    Location
    wakefield
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    7

    Jsb

    I find jsb are the best but every rifles different

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Hampshire
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    554
    Quote Originally Posted by orcecaveman View Post
    Ive got some Bisley Magnums. Going to give them a try.......
    good pellet for fac but sub 12 they drop a little bit get some airarms or jsb, almost everygun likes them

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Hampshire
    Posts
    554
    Quote Originally Posted by Andrewshaw View Post
    Try RWS pellets, very high quality
    hw are also a very good quility pellet

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Jul 2018
    Location
    Cradley Heath
    Posts
    13
    For the past two years [after discovering that RWS Superdome - 14.5 Grns, were 'spreading-out', beyond 30 yds, in my guns] I've been 'satisfactorily' using AA Diabolo Field - 16 Grains in my SFS Imp and 'Bowkett-Blueprinted' BSA Scorpion SE. People have suggested I try several of the ones mentioned above, which I haven't yet got round to doing [I'm getting great accuracy to at least 55 yds].

    In a Webley Stingray, which I bought last week, I have been trying JSB Jumbo Express Diabolo [14.35 Grains], a new tin of which having been given to me with the gun. I'm not sure of their ultimate accuracy capabilities, yet [gun and pellets] - I've been using the gun, for the first few 'shooting-hours', without a scope, as I like the way it points / balances with open sights - it reminds me of shooting in my teens, especially that part that saw me walking along the local canal towpath, with a BSA Model D, Improved, under my arm.

    Cheers, Dave.
    Last edited by Gabby Hayes; 09-07-2018 at 08:07 AM.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jun 2019
    Location
    Leicester
    Posts
    10

    barf zader

    I tried every pellet known to Man after I retired, washed lubed waxed drawn and quartered and found to my surprise that it made little or no difference at all!
    bit sad really,
    On regaining my senses I had it figured,

    Good quality pellets make all the difference, you get what you pay for,

    There are three main contenders, JSB, Air Arms (both made in the same factory) and H&N,

    All three will make most guns happy, but one of them will perform the best in your gun (pellet to barrel)

    Clean your barrel, fire 30 pellets, then a test group on paper, having found the best performer use that,

    if you really want perfection weigh your chosen pellets and buy a sizer to make them totally consistent,

    Happy And Safe Shooting.

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Aug 2019
    Location
    West London
    Posts
    70
    Air Arms Diabolo Field are best, in my experience. Hit a bullseye with a .22 at 60 yards today, with a spring gun. Gotta love that.
    Air Arms Pro-Sport .22 cal walnut stock (2019), BSA Supersport .177 cal (1999), British Diana Model 27 .177 (1950s), Umarex 850 M2 .22, Webley MkVI Service Revolver .177 pellet (2019), Sig Sauer XFive .177 pellet, Colt 1911 pellet.

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Sep 2021
    Location
    Rochester
    Posts
    20
    AA Diablo Fields Has consistency and accuracy in many rifles..

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Oct 2021
    Location
    Pensacola
    Posts
    8

    Drop tables?

    Trajectory hold overs are even more important than accuracy if one is talking distance.

    Is there any source of drop tables from the various manufactures. Normally it is the intention with most pellets that they not be injurious at longer range.
    At longer ranges I wonder if the typical pellet will be able to penetrate a paper target. I have read of accounts for 5.56/.223 rifle bullets bouncing off of the targets at 1000 yards for example when using less aerodynamic projectiles and wonder if the same would happen to pellets at say 200 yards.
    I only use a pellet gun when I want a 'safer' projectile because of human presence near by. Now days there are pellet guns with legal integral silencers attached in the USA so it might be less noisy. My interest in this is more from a safety perspective since being in the USA I have unregulated access to what ever firearm I want that is not over 50 caliber.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Aug 2019
    Location
    West London
    Posts
    70
    Quote Originally Posted by barnetmill View Post
    Trajectory hold overs are even more important than accuracy if one is talking distance.

    Is there any source of drop tables from the various manufactures. Normally it is the intention with most pellets that they not be injurious at longer range.
    At longer ranges I wonder if the typical pellet will be able to penetrate a paper target. I have read of accounts for 5.56/.223 rifle bullets bouncing off of the targets at 1000 yards for example when using less aerodynamic projectiles and wonder if the same would happen to pellets at say 200 yards.
    I only use a pellet gun when I want a 'safer' projectile because of human presence near by.
    There's an iPhone app called Chairgun which is excellent for calculating trajectory and force over distance. It allows you to input pellet weight, muzzle energy and wind conditions. I recommend it. Long story short, my UK-legal .22 calibre 12 foot-pound Air Arms Pro Sport (underlever spring gun) still has about 5 foot-pounds of power at 100 yards. That would not only puncture paper but also bare flesh, so you still need to be careful.

    For an illustration of what power remains after 200 yards, I point you towards this fun video where a shooter hits an exploding target at 218 yards with the same 12 foot-pound spring rifle that I have, the British-made Air Arms Pro Sport. He's using the .177 calibre version, which obviously has a flatter trajectory, but he still has to aim about six feet above the target. When it hits, the pellet still has sufficient energy to set off the reactive target. As you Americans would say, "enjoy!"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QaCvOgRIjY
    Air Arms Pro-Sport .22 cal walnut stock (2019), BSA Supersport .177 cal (1999), British Diana Model 27 .177 (1950s), Umarex 850 M2 .22, Webley MkVI Service Revolver .177 pellet (2019), Sig Sauer XFive .177 pellet, Colt 1911 pellet.

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Oct 2021
    Location
    Pensacola
    Posts
    8
    Quote Originally Posted by Walnut Stox View Post
    There's an iPhone app called Chairgun which is excellent for calculating trajectory and force over distance. It allows you to input pellet weight, muzzle energy and wind conditions. I recommend it. Long story short, my UK-legal .22 calibre 12 foot-pound Air Arms Pro Sport (underlever spring gun) still has about 5 foot-pounds of power at 100 yards. That would not only puncture paper but also bare flesh, so you still need to be careful.

    For an illustration of what power remains after 200 yards, I point you towards this fun video where a shooter hits an exploding target at 218 yards with the same 12 foot-pound spring rifle that I have, the British-made Air Arms Pro Sport. He's using the .177 calibre version, which obviously has a flatter trajectory, but he still has to aim about six feet above the target. When it hits, the pellet still has sufficient energy to set off the reactive target. As you Americans would say, "enjoy!"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QaCvOgRIjY
    I realize it is camera tricks that are being done, but still not a good example to show someone down range of someone holding a rifle, even if it is only an empty pellet gun.
    And yes a hit at a relatively such long range is impressive with a spring powered air rifle. I do not know if that particular air gun was target quality gun or not. The main character reminds me of my gunsmith, except his accent is from northern Mississippi.

    I will check out that program: iPhone app called Chairgun and see if there is one for an IBM type of computer.

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Oct 2021
    Location
    Pensacola
    Posts
    8
    Quote Originally Posted by barnetmill View Post
    I realize it is camera tricks that are being done, but still not a good example to show someone down range of someone holding a rifle, even if it is only an empty pellet gun.
    And yes a hit at a relatively such long range is impressive with a spring powered air rifle. I do not know if that particular air gun was target quality gun or not. The main character reminds me of my gunsmith, except his accent is from northern Mississippi.

    I will check out that program: iPhone app called Chairgun and see if there is one for an IBM type of computer.
    I found a windows version of it at
    https://en.freedownloadmanager.org/W...-Pro-FREE.html

  14. #29
    Join Date
    May 2021
    Location
    Basingstoke
    Posts
    54
    according to i hunter the new qys .22 pellets come out in January
    Ive got to give them a try cause their .177 are ace in my bsa r10

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Dec 2021
    Location
    Kendal
    Posts
    100
    Quote Originally Posted by averageplinker View Post
    Nick,
    I think you have taught me something tonight. I bought some accupell ft recently and they have been truly awful in everything so far. Your post made me wonder if accupell and accupell ft are one and the same. It appears not! Please don't anyone else make the same mistake.
    Rich.
    Thank goodness you had the same results with the FTs. "Probably the most accurate airgun ammo" my Aunt Fanny. Accurate in what, I wonder?
    The problem with being old is that you can remember when things weren't crap. Sometimes.

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