I had the day off on wednesday and decided to take the Tomcat out for work. I've been putting in some serious time in my basement range with all my airguns, and have been experimenting with different things on the Tomcat. I removed the scope (mounted it on the 1322) and put on a laser sight. The Tomcat is unbelievably consistent and accurate, and the laser sight was easy to install, and just as easy to sight in. Within minutes I was producing dime size groups off of a bean bag rest at 10 yds.
The weather here has been cold, we got snow on mon., but wednesday was relatively warm, 55 degs., and sunny. The squirrels, again, are in full fatten up mode and making a fairly regular habit of going through my garbage. So it was a work day for the Tomcat. I sat and watched my garbage with a coffee in hand, and was shortly rewarded with a plump squirrel sneaking onto the top of my garbage. With a scope, I would've taken the shot from the window ( about 25 yds.), but seeing as I had just installed the laser sight, and knowing this was beyond what it was sighted in for, I decided to practice a bit of stalking. I got within 15 yds. and placed the red laser on the fusebox and squeezed the very light predictable Crooked Barn modded trigger, the gun silently sent a cphp to it's target. The plump one fell from the garbage, did a little dance and expired. The shot placement was perfect, and the cphp went all the way through.
The next day I decided on culling the treerat herd a bit more. So I did exactly what I did the day before. The only difference is that it was 20 degs colder at 35 degs. Well I knew that the cold would negatively impact CO2, but reasoned that at within 15 yds. it wouldn't make much of a difference, boy was I wrong. A very similar opportunity as the day before presented itself to me, and I followed the same steps and again got to within 15 yds, lined up the laser and let fly with a cphp, and hit home, or I thought I did. I heard the familiar pop, sort of saw the pellet find its mark, and watched as the treerat flipped a few times in the air land on its side, and.........GET UP and run to the nearest tree. The squirrel was now about 20 yds away. I quickly reloaded, got to within 12 yds, as the squirrel just sat in the tree about 10 ft up. I could now see the spot that the first cphp hit, a bloody spot right at the base of its neck. I no longer had a good backstop but at this distance I felt very comfortable in my ability to hit my mark, and felt like I needed to make an effort at humanely dispatching the squirrel. I decided to go for the clearer easier shot and go for my trusty shoulder shot. I fired again, the squirrel fell from the tree, got up again and ran off over my fence where I lost track of it.
I'm fairly certain I hit this thing 2 times at very close range and didnt anchor it. Only thing I could think of, aside from that I just missed, is that the cold had a bigger impact on CO2 then I thought it would. So I took out the chrono, and was surprised at the results. The Tomcat chrono'd in my basement where its about 68 degs at an average of 562 between shots 3 and 15 which is good for a little more than 10 fpe. The results outside at 35 degs was an average of 372 between the same shot counts, which cuts down the fpe to 4.395. I'm shocked at the steep drop off, and have learned a valuable lesson. I guess the CO2 stays in my range until it warms up above 55 again.