ribbonstone - 8/26/2006 7:18 AM
Given a pellet with enough power to penetrate the critter in question, then it's a matter of having the shooter place the pellet so that it intersects viatal parts on it's trip through. Don't do that, and it makes little difference which caliber pellet inpacts. Given a powerful enough airgun for the job at hand, getting the pellet delivered to the right spot is key.
.177's will have more range limitations and are more dependent on finding a pellet that retains it's velocity well. High BC pellets also tend to be high penetration pellets...if it has the length/weight/point shape to penetrate air well, they tend to penetrate game well. Don't get caught up in only that; a nice fast high BC pellet that shoots less accurately isn't really going to help.
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Word about accuracy.
Better to do final testing at the range you expect for most of your hunting shots. Waht shoots best at 15yards may not be the best at 40yards. Seems like it should be proportional (40yards being twice the size of 20yard groups, etc.) but it just doesn't seem to work out that way.
BC is a big part of having a pellet with enough power to penetrate the critter in question and in my view, that is where "power" in air rifles really matters -not in "shock value" but in the ability of the pellet to reach vitals and pierce them, thus taking them out of commission.
I disagree STRONGLY with the assertion that .177 will have more range limitations. In mid-magnum and magnum piston rifles of the same power, .177 will shoot flatter than the larger calibers will. Thus, it will have a longer point-blank range. That may not matter much if all of your shots are under 40 yards, but it can make a difference if you are shooting in the 40 to 50 yard range.
Nice, fast high BC pellets that shoot less accurately than another choice can indeed help, and help tremendeously.
Case in point: In my wife's Shadow, Kodiaks are among the most accurate pellets in terms of group size. They do not, however, shoot anywhere near as fast or flat as Copperheads do. While the Kodiaks are more accurate ON THE RANGE, in the field, the Copperheads are accurate enough out of her rifle to allow reliable hits to the KZ of a valley quail out to 50 yards. Those hits are also easier to make in the field, because range estimation is much less critical due to the extended point-blank range. Sure, if we shot 5 or 10 shot groups into quail at 40 yards, the Kodiaks in her gun would make the tightest ones. But we don't shoot 5 shots into a single quail. We shoot a single shot into a single quail.
Am I saying that accuracy doesn't matter? Of course not. But there really is such a thing in hunting as accurate enough -at least in the hunting that I do. And, in the hunting that I do, there are situations where more accuracy than enough isn't going to help as much as a flatter trajectory and more downrange thump will.
Where accuracy is concerned for me, I test for acceptable precision at 50 yards. A pellet that groups great at 15 might not do so slick at 50 and if BC is totally ignored, it probably won't. So far, the pellets that have been accurate enough at 50 yards for the shooting that I do have proved satisfactory for closer ranges, too. I don't test for the average scenario, as most of the game that I shoot with an air rifle is closer to 30 yards from my rifle than 50, most of the time. I test for the worst-case scenario at the maximum range that I am comfortable shooting small edible game at with an air rifle, and that's 50 yards.
It isn't just placement. It's placement AND penetration, and finding the ideal compromise that offers enough of each to get the job done in a quick, humane way.
JP
http://www.uplandhunter.net