Air Rifle power limitations
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Air Rifle power limitations
Is there a limit on the FPE or FPS of match air rifles used in ISSF or NRA competition?
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Jim E
Following the development of the wadcutter .177 pellet in the 1950's, testing determined the ideal velocity, i.e. consistent stability leading to maximum accuracy, was around 575 fps. As these are single purpose airguns - punch a hole consistently through a paper target 10 meters down range - velocities much above or below 575 fps would defeat the airguns purpose. Could this be why even today Feinwerkbau's advertised velocity for their P700 is 575!
Re: Jim E
I think my FWB 300 listed 640 at the FPS.
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quote="Jim E"]Following the development of the wadcutter .177 pellet in the 1950's, testing determined the ideal velocity, i.e. consistent stability leading to maximum accuracy, was around 575 fps. As these are single purpose airguns - punch a hole consistently through a paper target 10 meters down range - velocities much above or below 575 fps would defeat the airguns purpose. Could this be why even today Feinwerkbau's advertised velocity for their P700 is 575![/quote]
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quote="Jim E"]Following the development of the wadcutter .177 pellet in the 1950's, testing determined the ideal velocity, i.e. consistent stability leading to maximum accuracy, was around 575 fps. As these are single purpose airguns - punch a hole consistently through a paper target 10 meters down range - velocities much above or below 575 fps would defeat the airguns purpose. Could this be why even today Feinwerkbau's advertised velocity for their P700 is 575![/quote]
Beeman advertized the FWB300S velocity at 640 fps with a footnote these velocities were achieved with either Beeman Laser (very light 6.5 g) or Beeman Silver Bear (light 7.1 g) pellets (see Beeman Catelog #22 @ page 52). Ah, must admit Beeman was a master at marketing.
A variety of factors can influence velocity, such as pellet weight and elevation. Its not uncommon, based on testing 50+ FWB300 and/or FWB 300S for resale, to see velocities at or above 575 fps level - rule of thumb is slightly higher velocities with more consistency witnessed using 4.50 mm pellets. It is not uncommon to see rebuilt 300's shot in the 590 to 630 range and have heard one rebuilt by Randy Bimrose approaching 670 fps.
From a historical perspective, the Walther's LGR (first SSP match air rifle) advertised their velocity in the 550 to 570 fps range. Immediately following the LGR's introduction in late 1975, the rifle broke both world records and subplanted the FWB300S as the "world beater."
Chrony's are a wonderful tool to judge and monitor performance --- and very helpful to identify which pellet each individual match rifle prefers (consistency velocities are quite meaningful). I'd personally prefer a 565 fps that remains consistent over a hotter shooting rifle which has greater variation. But don't take my word for this as I'm a terrible rifle shooter.
Hope this is of some value.
Jim E
A variety of factors can influence velocity, such as pellet weight and elevation. Its not uncommon, based on testing 50+ FWB300 and/or FWB 300S for resale, to see velocities at or above 575 fps level - rule of thumb is slightly higher velocities with more consistency witnessed using 4.50 mm pellets. It is not uncommon to see rebuilt 300's shot in the 590 to 630 range and have heard one rebuilt by Randy Bimrose approaching 670 fps.
From a historical perspective, the Walther's LGR (first SSP match air rifle) advertised their velocity in the 550 to 570 fps range. Immediately following the LGR's introduction in late 1975, the rifle broke both world records and subplanted the FWB300S as the "world beater."
Chrony's are a wonderful tool to judge and monitor performance --- and very helpful to identify which pellet each individual match rifle prefers (consistency velocities are quite meaningful). I'd personally prefer a 565 fps that remains consistent over a hotter shooting rifle which has greater variation. But don't take my word for this as I'm a terrible rifle shooter.
Hope this is of some value.
Jim E
What's Beeman? i'm talking about the listed FPS in my FWB manual.
Jim E wrote:Beeman advertized the FWB300S velocity at 640 fps with a footnote these velocities were achieved with either Beeman Laser (very light 6.5 g) or Beeman Silver Bear (light 7.1 g) pellets (see Beeman Catelog #22 @ page 52). Ah, must admit Beeman was a master at marketing.
A variety of factors can influence velocity, such as pellet weight and elevation. Its not uncommon, based on testing 50+ FWB300 and/or FWB 300S for resale, to see velocities at or above 575 fps level - rule of thumb is slightly higher velocities with more consistency witnessed using 4.50 mm pellets. It is not uncommon to see rebuilt 300's shot in the 590 to 630 range and have heard one rebuilt by Randy Bimrose approaching 670 fps.
From a historical perspective, the Walther's LGR (first SSP match air rifle) advertised their velocity in the 550 to 570 fps range. Immediately following the LGR's introduction in late 1975, the rifle broke both world records and subplanted the FWB300S as the "world beater."
Chrony's are a wonderful tool to judge and monitor performance --- and very helpful to identify which pellet each individual match rifle prefers (consistency velocities are quite meaningful). I'd personally prefer a 565 fps that remains consistent over a hotter shooting rifle which has greater variation. But don't take my word for this as I'm a terrible rifle shooter.
Hope this is of some value.
Jim E
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Not quite. Unlike you (and the Germans), I can buy any air gun or any firearm (except fully automatic ones) without a license or permit of any kind. Any caliber, any magazine capacity, any action type, in any quantity.Sparks wrote:But all the top US shooters are shooting with German guns so it's a bit of a moot point really! :pJose Rossy wrote:Thankfully, there is no such nonsense in the USA.
Ain't life grand?
Actually, while you can certainly do that, you'd have to be doing it illegally (since fully automatic firearms are illegal in the US without licences since the 1930s) and, well, if we're talking about illegal purchases...Jose Rossy wrote:Not quite. Unlike you (and the Germans), I can buy any air gun or any firearm (except fully automatic ones) without a license or permit of any kind. Any caliber, any magazine capacity, any action type, in any quantity.
And last I checked, the olympic US shooters shot with Steyrs, Walthers, Feinwerkbaus and so on. Not exactly all-american names, y'know...
Just a clarification there are no licenses for fully automatic firearms unless a state license is required (in the US). You have to pay a transfer tax, whihc is a pretty invasive procedure but technically it's a tax, not a license.
As to Beeman, I was just kidding...
As to Beeman, I was just kidding...
Sparks wrote:Actually, while you can certainly do that, you'd have to be doing it illegally (since fully automatic firearms are illegal in the US without licences since the 1930s) and, well, if we're talking about illegal purchases...Jose Rossy wrote:Not quite. Unlike you (and the Germans), I can buy any air gun or any firearm (except fully automatic ones) without a license or permit of any kind. Any caliber, any magazine capacity, any action type, in any quantity.
And last I checked, the olympic US shooters shot with Steyrs, Walthers, Feinwerkbaus and so on. Not exactly all-american names, y'know...
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Partner, you have loooooooooooooong way to go to teach me about the gun laws in my country. And you need to read a bit better: "any firearm (except fully automatic ones)".....Sparks wrote:Actually, while you can certainly do that, you'd have to be doing it illegally (since fully automatic firearms are illegal in the US without licences since the 1930s) and, well, if we're talking about illegal purchases...Jose Rossy wrote:Not quite. Unlike you (and the Germans), I can buy any air gun or any firearm (except fully automatic ones) without a license or permit of any kind. Any caliber, any magazine capacity, any action type, in any quantity.