I am new to the forum and to spingers. In Texas when you file for divorce you cannot be in possession of a firearm. My attorney said an air rifle cannot be classified as a firearm. My son and I both like to hunt and to plink with .22s. and not being able to posses a firearm through the season was going to be a bummer so I thought about a pellet gun. Went to Academy Sports to by a Benjamin just to plink with and to my surprise they have a Gamo Shadow and Varmint Hunter that boast 1000 FPS velocity. They look pretty cool too. I know if I show up at the deer lease with this thing I will be laughed off the place and probably not allowed back on until next year but I enjoy the lease, cooking out and how relaxing it is there so I chance it. We get there late Friday night, cook, play cards and go to bed. The next morning everyone is loading up the 4 wheelers to head out to their stands and I take out my Varmint Hunter, load up and head out. No one even notices it is a pellet gun.
No, I didn't think I can kill a deer with it. My thinking was I could sit in the stand, listen to my ipod, and maybe shoot a few quail coming in to the feeder, a rabbit or squirrel, maybe an unsuspecting armadillo, skunk or something. Just being out with a gun in my hands, even if it was pellet gun, was better than the alternative. I should mention that before going to the lease I had put about 1000 rounds through it, a new 4 x 12 x 40 scope on it, and had it sighted in at 30 yds. At this point I hadn't tried any shots beyond 30 yds and wasn't sure what it would do, how much drop it would have etc.
It starts to get light out and I see a sparrow in a tree. I take out the range finder and see that the range is 48 yds. so I raise the elevation 6 clicks thinking to compensate for the drop. I sight in and fire. Miss. Can't tell if it was high or not, but I decide it was still low so I aim again, this time about 1" above the bird. Missed again. This time I aim at the branch the bird is sitting on and the bird ducks his head when I fire. Okay, It is shooting high. I bring the elevation down 6 clicks and aim right on him and he drops like a rock. I am surprised at the flatness of the trajectory and decide to see what this thing will do at further range. I had bought some crow magnums but hadn't had a chance to shoot them. Knowing they are a heavier pellet than premier hollow points I was shooting I load one up, give the elevation 12 clicks up, and fire at a rock 50yds out. Hit a little in front of it. I play with it for a few shots and have it hitting a rock at 60yds within a few shots. This is starting to be fun. Much more concentration and skill is needed to shoot this thing than I ever had to have with my .243, .223, .22 or .270.
To make a long story short, I get back to camp, one of my buddies sons sees my Gamo, and ask what I am doing with a pellet rifle. Man did I catch some crap. My buddies son, Nick, ask if he can shoot it. I say sure, it is sighted in at 50 yds, and I catch more crap. When they quit laughing Nick takes a beer can and starts walking out to set it down. He stops at 20 yds and I say to keep going. At about 50 yds I say that's far enough. ( more laughing) He sets it down, comes back, picks up the Gamo, loads it, and starts to sight in on the can. (more laughing)
Bless his heart he hit the can. ( Silence) He fires a few more times and maybe hit it again 2 out 5 times, but he was close on the ones he missed and the misses kicked up dirt off the hard ground and you could hear the pellet ricochet off into the air. Before the evening was over, everyone had shot it, talked about how powerful it was for a pellet gun, and had used up my can of crow magnums.
My question is this. How much more accuracy do you get with the GRT-III Trigger. I am hooked on springers and want to make this as accurate as possible. I know I have missed shots do to the pull required on the stock trigger.