Youkilis:
It may be generally accepted that the Shadow is more powerful than the CFX but I'm not sure I believe there is a significant difference in output between the two.
I'm confident that the CFX has enough ooooom-pa-pa to shoot just as flat as an untuned HW-97 would. Likewise, I KNOW that my Shadow had more power and velocity than my tuned .177 R-9 has and would definitely win out on power over a standard .177 R-9. Either way, I'd personally rate the power of each as sufficient for any purpose I would put an air rifle to.
I personally wouldn't let any power difference between these two models be the determining factor in my purchase decision.
I'm not a huge fan of fixed-barrel spring-piston rifles because they aren't as quick to reload as the break barrels with their nice, wide-open breeches are. That makes a big difference to me because of the nature the hunting that I engage in (upland game birds) is such that I want to capitalize on multiple, consecutive shot opportunities that arise in the target-rich environment one finds oneself in when surrounded by a covey of 40 to 50 valley quail.
For other kinds of hunting, fast reloading isn't an issue. In turkey hunting, for example, you essentially get just one "shot" at anchoring your bird.
But hey, I'm prbably the wrong guy to comment on matters of power because to a point, it doesn't matter to me.
I'm more concerned with how much I've got at 50 yards than how much I've got at the muzzle and if I can get 8 ft/lbs+ at 50 yards, I've got enough energy to kill all of the game one can legally shoot with an air rifle in California very dead very quickly if I apply it in the right spot.
I'm also a guy who, "back in the day," owned two Webley Omegas in .177, with one totally stock and the other kitted out with several hundered 1980's dollars worth of Venom parts. I hunted with the lower powered gun because it gave more consistant velocities over a broader range of temperatures. The more stable point of impact was more important to me than power was, because with brain-pan shots on cottontails, even that wimpy stock 11.5-11.8 ft/lb .177 Omega had enough juice at 45 to 50 yards to kill a cottontail.
All of this is to say that I still believe that where hunting with a pellet gun, particularly in .177, placement matters more than power does, because in .177, even with a gun around 12 ft/lb, you'll have plenty of penetration to reach something vital and pierce it. In the field, I don't hink you'll notice a difference of a ft/lb more or less and don't think a rabbit or squirrel would, and that is probably the difference you are talking about between a Shadow and a CFX, if one even exists.
I say "if" because the nature of thse things is that they are all individual to a degree. My Shadow, for example, put out more power than my wife's does. Basically, if there is a difference, you might just as easily attribute it to the individual performance of the individual guns, and if you happened to compare a particularly "hot" CFX with a Shadow running a bit on the wimpy side of normal, the CFX might come out the winner in the power department.
Since I believe that either one has enough power and velocity for any use one would put a smallbore spring-piston air rifle to, I'd buy the one I like the best. For me, that is the Shadow. For you, it may be the CFX. They are both nice guns and it seems like you really can't go wrong either way.
-JP
http://www.uplandhunter.net