andyfr1968 772 Posted April 5, 2013 Report Share Posted April 5, 2013 (edited) im surprised your still talking on this jandc, clearly your adolesence has shown...one because your stubborn and still talking complete uselssness, and two you havent grown up enough to either apologise or leave the conversation. on another note, has anyone had much experience with .20 or .25? im really interested to hear how they are Hello, mate. I've not had much to do with .25 and the little I did was a long time ago but I'm a big fan of .20. I've always argued the toss before when folks describe it as the compromise caliber but I guess it is a bit really. It depends a lot on which pellets a gun prefers as to how they shoot as most pellets are a lot closer to .22 than .177 in weight. My HW90 loves H and N FTTs which tip in at a claimed 11.44 grains so they do hold a much flatter flight than a .22 would given the same power. I'm experimenting with Logun Penetrators at the moment and so far I'm very happy with those too but at 15.6 grains they're a lot closer to .22 but they don't slow down as much in flight so they are a little flatter than a .22 pellet of the same weight would be. Hope this helps. Edited April 5, 2013 by andyfr1968 Quote Link to post
Skot Ruthless Teale 1,701 Posted April 5, 2013 Report Share Posted April 5, 2013 off the top of my head, a few years back we used to get logan penetrators in .22 both 16.4 gr and 21 gr aswell... ?? so thats some heavy ass .20 lead at 15.6 gr !! Quote Link to post
barrywhite 282 Posted April 5, 2013 Report Share Posted April 5, 2013 I know 177 over penetrates because once after shooting a rabbit the pellet when through it killing it ,but the rabbit standing next to it that I did not see also died when the pellet when into it also killing it.177 has no stopping power . 1 Quote Link to post
woodcote1 88 Posted April 5, 2013 Report Share Posted April 5, 2013 Jesus. When i said i preferred 22 it was just a personal view. I don't get on with 177, most folk do. Wish i could!!!! Quote Link to post
ghillies 209 Posted April 6, 2013 Report Share Posted April 6, 2013 Jesus. When i said i preferred 22 it was just a personal view. I don't get on with 177, most folk do. Wish i could!!!! bet you feel guilty now..realy realy guilty.... hehehehehehe!!!! Quote Link to post
ghillies 209 Posted April 6, 2013 Report Share Posted April 6, 2013 (edited) aww shucks cyber ((((((((hug)))))))) you shouldnt..it wasnt your fault.. Edited April 6, 2013 by ghillies Quote Link to post
hunter100t 56 Posted April 8, 2013 Report Share Posted April 8, 2013 Well I had a look out with my 22 Exocet and was nocking rabbits down at over 50 yards easy, I believe in 177 for feather 22 for furr That old quote mat have been true years ago when air rifles "Were" low powered, when a .22 could and often did bounce off a crow at 30 yrds, and .177 used to be a bit less on the power stakes. But its different now, more power, same power for both calibers.I shot mainly .22 for 38 yrs but for the last 6 its been .177. I just prefer the speed,less holdover, and some one mentioned earlier that you can weave your shots a lot easier in the small gaps in the branches. no one has mentioned yet about power retention down range. Using a hw 100 in .177 and a hw 90 in .22 using 7.9 and 14.3 grn accupells shooting over a chrono at 50 yrds, both rifles doing 11.9 fpe, the .177 retained 7.1 fpe and the .22 6.9 fpe, average weight pellets i know, but very similar with heavies, with .177 being the most powerfull at range. The smaller .177 usualy traveling about 200 fps faster than a .22, retains more energy because its got less wind to contend with. and that does it for me. fur and feather ? crap, they both do it. atb phil 1 Quote Link to post
hunter100t 56 Posted April 8, 2013 Report Share Posted April 8, 2013 (edited) I know 177 over penetrates because once after shooting a rabbit the pellet when through it killing it ,but the rabbit standing next to it that I did not see also died when the pellet when into it also killing it.177 has no stopping power. But it killed both rabbits ! Thers your stopping power right there, Dead rabbit, It is stopped x 2, pretty good stopping power i would say. atb phil Edited April 8, 2013 by hunter100t Quote Link to post
jed12 1 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 177 or me. I have used a 22 before but couldn't get used to the drop of the pellet. I use the old saying 22 for fur and 177 for feather Quote Link to post
trenchfoot 4,243 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 177 or me. I have used a 22 before but couldn't get used to the drop of the pellet. I use the old saying 22 for fur and 177 for feather I use the saying, "use what you like, hit 'em in the noggin and they will fall over!" 1 Quote Link to post
paulus 26 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 cleaned up as best i can Quote Link to post
keithy 0 Posted April 18, 2013 Report Share Posted April 18, 2013 I ve both ,177 and .22 but prefer .22, the pellet drop is not really an issue both calibres drop. When you know your .22 gun you know how much to compensate. To hit a rabbit in the brain with .177 in the hunting field (not the range) is very difficult. But a hit with .22 NEAR to the brain will still kill due to impact shock. Quote Link to post
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