Chronographing Pellets
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, David Levene, Spencer, Richard H
Forum rules
If you wish to make a donation to this forum's operation , it would be greatly appreciated.
https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/targettalk?yours=true
If you wish to make a donation to this forum's operation , it would be greatly appreciated.
https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/targettalk?yours=true
Chronographing Pellets
I have a Chrony F-1 chronograph, which I use once in a while to chronograph firearm loads. I tried to chronograph pellets in my basement and I can't get it to register a shot. Are there any tricks to get it to work indoors on pellets?
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Most chrono's will not work under fluro lighting,
check your light setup and use old incandescent globes.
check your light setup and use old incandescent globes.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Thanks. I have fluorescent lighting in the basement. I am thinking of using a piece of plywood on top of V rods with two 60W incandescent bulbs directly over sensors.
-
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Thu Jul 16, 2015 5:59 pm
- Location: MI, USA
Re: Chronographing Pellets
I've used my Chrony successfully outdoors but I did find I got better results if I kept the pellets close to the sensor.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
I got it to work about 40% of the time. 60W light bulbs seem to works better than 25W or 100W. The shot had to be well centered to register. The odds were improved by all fluorescent fixture turned off. Still some shots didn't register or gave an error without any reason.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Do you have the accessory diffuser screen? That helps indoors.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Lenny,
I attach two (2) LED torches (one on the top of each diffuser screen) using a ring of Blu-Tack - works a treat.
Have fun :)
Best regards
Russ
I attach two (2) LED torches (one on the top of each diffuser screen) using a ring of Blu-Tack - works a treat.
Have fun :)
Best regards
Russ
Re: Chronographing Pellets
I have the diffusers that came with the unit. I wasn't using them. I thought they were only needed for outdoor use.mikeyj wrote:Do you have the accessory diffuser screen? That helps indoors.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Russ,PhatMan wrote:Lenny,
I attach two (2) LED torches (one on the top of each diffuser screen) using a ring of Blu-Tack - works a treat.
Have fun :)
Best regards
Russ
Thanks for the tip. Could you give a link or post a picture of "LED torches" you used. I googled it and came up with different varieties. Most were just LED flashlights. Some were like LED stick. Single LED? Multi-LED?
Re: Chronographing Pellets
They help whenever you have direct light source, rather than diffuse light. You need them on a sunny day but not a cloudy day.Lenny wrote:I have the diffusers that came with the unit. I wasn't using them. I thought they were only needed for outdoor use.mikeyj wrote:Do you have the accessory diffuser screen? That helps indoors.
-
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Thu Jul 16, 2015 5:59 pm
- Location: MI, USA
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Lenny wrote:Russ,PhatMan wrote:Lenny,
I attach two (2) LED torches (one on the top of each diffuser screen) using a ring of Blu-Tack - works a treat.
Have fun :)
Best regards
Russ
Thanks for the tip. Could you give a link or post a picture of "LED torches" you used. I googled it and came up with different varieties. Most were just LED flashlights. Some were like LED stick. Single LED? Multi-LED?
Depending on the power supply LED lights powered from the AC power found in your house can cause the same "flicker" issues that make fluorescent lights a "No Go" for chronograph work. LED torches (flashlights) powered by batteries will be an excellent option however.
I think if you install the diffuser and illuminate it brightly with a non flickering source you should get good results with the understanding that pellets are tiny and hard for the sensor to see.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Good info; I have enough trouble chronying in bright sunlight.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
This is what I use; http://www.competitionelectronics.com/p ... ng-system/#
They have infrared leds, not visible to the human eye. It works extremely well.
Gort
They have infrared leds, not visible to the human eye. It works extremely well.
Gort
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Yes, lots of good information in this thread. Thanks to all for input. I am trying to digest it all. I started out with making do with what I had lying around the house, but should have done more research. I made a nice contraption from a plywood and two lightbulbs, which ended up half-useless.
Didn't plan on spending any money on this, but looks like I will have to.
I chronographed my two IZH-46M pistols and the numbers came out pretty decent. One that I resealed over a year ago had average velocity of 454 fps. The one that still has the original seals (14 years old) showed an average velocity of 488 fps. Since the seals are so old, that's why I wanted to check it out. It actually showed a higher speed. The difference between the two pistols is 34 fps. Probably because the pellets I am using fit a little looser in that one and easier to push through the bore. Does this sound possible or did I screw up resealing job? Extreme spread looks good 7.1 fps and 7.4 fps respectively.
Didn't plan on spending any money on this, but looks like I will have to.
I chronographed my two IZH-46M pistols and the numbers came out pretty decent. One that I resealed over a year ago had average velocity of 454 fps. The one that still has the original seals (14 years old) showed an average velocity of 488 fps. Since the seals are so old, that's why I wanted to check it out. It actually showed a higher speed. The difference between the two pistols is 34 fps. Probably because the pellets I am using fit a little looser in that one and easier to push through the bore. Does this sound possible or did I screw up resealing job? Extreme spread looks good 7.1 fps and 7.4 fps respectively.
Last edited by Lenny on Fri Mar 25, 2016 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Not to be a curmudgeon, but... unless you suspect a velocity problem with your pistol why bother? When I was young (in my 50's) and carefree (I could do it on my boss's time) I velocity tested every type of pellet I'd ever considered using. The only general rule I could derive was that there is no correlation between chronographed velocity - either magnitude or consistency - and performance on target.
Then I decided to take Mako's advice to stop futzing around with testing and spend the time practicing / shooting.
Then I decided to take Mako's advice to stop futzing around with testing and spend the time practicing / shooting.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
My main reason for doing this was to check if old seals are still holding up. Turns out they are doing as good or better than new seals. I would rather do this then change seals on schedule. For accuracy sake or pellet selection I agree it is pointless. The target is too generous and I can barely keep them inside an eight ring.william wrote:Not to be a curmudgeon, but... unless you suspect a velocity problem with your pistol why bother? When I was young (in my 50's) and carefree (I could do it on my boss's time) I velocity tested every type of pellet I'd ever considered using. The only general rule I could derive was that there is no correlation between chronographed velocity - either magnitude or consistency - and performance on target.
Then I decided to take Mako's advice to stop futzing around with testing and spend the time practicing / shooting.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
Good ol' Mako!
-
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Thu Jul 16, 2015 5:59 pm
- Location: MI, USA
Re: Chronographing Pellets
While I agree with the folks that say chonographing is useless when it comes to predicting accuracy the truth of the matter is as an engineer I just gotta know the ave. velocity and SD. So just for comparison sake my results are as follows as best I can recall without going to my records using RWS Basic pellets (7.0 grains):Lenny wrote:Yes, lots of good information in this thread. Thanks to all for input. I am trying to digest it all. I started out with making do with what I had lying around the house, but should have done more research. I made a nice contraption from a plywood and two lightbulbs, which ended up half-useless.
Didn't plan on spending any money on this, but looks like I will have to.
I chronographed my two IZH-46M pistols and the numbers came out pretty decent. One that I resealed over a year ago had average velocity of 454 fps. The one that still has the original seals (14 years old) showed an average velocity of 488 fps. Since the seals are so old, that's why I wanted to check it out. It actually showed a higher speed. The difference between the two pistols is 34 fps. Probably because the pellets I am using fit a little looser in that one and easier to push through the bore. Does this sound possible or did I screw up resealing job? Extreme spread looks good 7.1 fps and 7.4 fps respectively.
IZH46(no M from 1998) 430 fps
IZH46m (2014 w/about 4k rounds) 460 fps
Re: Chronographing Pellets
That's close to my velocity on the pistol I resealed, so I am good there (I used 7.0 grain R-10 pellets).Green_Canoe wrote:
While I agree with the folks that say chonographing is useless when it comes to predicting accuracy the truth of the matter is as an engineer I just gotta know the ave. velocity and SD. So just for comparison sake my results are as follows as best I can recall without going to my records using RWS Basic pellets (7.0 grains):
IZH46(no M from 1998) 430 fps
IZH46m (2014 w/about 4k rounds) 460 fps
488 fps in my other pistol is icing on the cake. The specs. are 470 fps. Pellets slide into that one with very little resistance.
Thanks for sharing your data.
Re: Chronographing Pellets
I bent my F1's rods and hot glued them into the plastic diffuser strips, crazy glued the plastic strips together so they wouldn't fall apart so easily. All that just to offer a place to stick a couple of LED pucks with magnets. Works reliably. No errors if I'm shooting over both sensors. Pictures: