vinceb - 9/15/2007 10:47 PM
If'n my figures are correct, your gun is delivering between about 14 and 23 ft-lbs of energy, depending on the pellet. It also seems odd that it shoots the FTS so much slower than the much heavier Crow-Magnums.
Yeah, that is strange.
I have found similar anomalies with other airguns.
Even though the Crow Magnum is a rather heavy pellet, while the FTS is significantly lighter, the former is faster.
I am guessing that there is more at work than simple weight ratios, such as how tightly each respective pellet fits the bore, how efficiently a given pellet harnesses the spring piston, lubricity of each pellet, etc.
To further surprise you, my .22 CFX actually shoots two types of pellets FASTER than the .177 CFX versions of the same pellets.
JSB Exact (.177) - 754
JSB Exact (.22) - 767
Beeman Ram Jet (.177) - 713
Beeman Ram Jet (.22) - 735
Furthermore, it also shoots two other pellets so close to the .177 versions that it is probably overlapping and either the same or higher with the .22 again (I didn't go to the trouble to shoot several of each pellet, then average, I simply shot two or three to "wake up" my rifles, then shot one of each pellet over my Chrony).
JSB Predator Polymer Tip (.177) - 778
JSB Predator Polymer Tip (.22) - 756
Beeman Kodiak (.177) - 715
Beeman Kodiak (.22) - 704
From all this data, it seems that the .22 is considerably more efficient in utilizing the energy at its disposal.
Oh, accuracy-wise, the .22 loves JSB Exacts (1/2" @ 50 yards), while the .177 seems to have a three-way tie between Ram Jets, Exacts, and Superdomes, all of which drop inside 1/2" @ 50 yards.
However, they each have pellets they do not shoot well.
In the .177, those pellets are the Gamo Raptor (no surprise, supersonic instability, something on the order of 1-1/2") and the Beeman Silver Ace (terrible, hovers around 2").
The .22 throws Silver Arrows so poorly that I am guessing somewhere around 4-5"!
Great airguns, and not very hold sensitive at all.
In fact, their firing behavior and handling remind me more of a .22 rimfire than a spring piston airgun.
