I have missed 2 or 3 squirrels this fall with my P35-177. It was sighted in with H&N Baracuda FTs. I shot a 197 on the 30 yard challenge with these pellets in this gun so I thought I was good to go. But I decided to check my first shot accuracy after the gun had set 12 hours or so. I also included 4 other guns. The top row is the first through 4th shots with my P35-177. As you can see, it did not do great (or I did not). Target shooting with this gun and pellet I had to leave my body off the gun to get it's best performance. So maybe it isn't surprising. I switched to the pellet I used to use in it, the H&N Baracuda Match and got 4 shots including that first critical one within 1/4 inch of the center. I will test it some more but this may give me acceptable hunting accuracy. When even an occasional shot is more than 1/2 inch from the point of aim I would rather not hunt with it. By itself that should not cause a miss at short range but it sure doesn't help anything. Most are within 1/4 inch but I really want all there or certainly within 1/2 inch. These shots are at 30 yards.
The next row down is my P35-22, after that is my Caiman X, after that is my P35-25. And the red dots are my Prod. All these guns wear 6-24 scopes except the P35-25 which has a 4-16 and the Prod which has a 2-7. I had multiple issues with the Prod, it fell out of tune and I could not see the target at 7X so there is only one shot at each target for it. But even at 7X I got acceptable accuracy. The Caiman did the best and I may try it on squirrels. It is plenty powerful pushing 18 grain H&Ns over 900 fps. But I like the P35-22. I like the Prod for short range shots so I do not have to aim so high. The first series of shots with my P35-25 was with it off reg. I get close to 20 shots with this gun at essentially the same velocity (and accuracy) after it goes below the regulator setting (of about 150 bar). The other shots are after I aired it back up. It is pushing 34 grain JSBs (MKII) at just under 800 fps, overkill for squirrels with this pellet and tune. I took all 18 squirrels with it on a much milder tune using H&N FTT pellets but it is more accurate with these big JSBs.
All except the Caiman, the newest, have taken squirrels for me. The P35-25 has taken 18, the Prod 17, the P35-177 12, and the P35-22 10. They all work but I kind of want to use the 177 more. With the Match pellets maybe I can. But my only question mark is the 177. It is also very wind sensitive and that may also play a role.
If you haven't tested your guns after they've sat at least 12 hours and preferably overnight I suggest you should. Sometimes they don't shoot quite the same on the first shot.
View attachment hunting accuracy.pdf
The next row down is my P35-22, after that is my Caiman X, after that is my P35-25. And the red dots are my Prod. All these guns wear 6-24 scopes except the P35-25 which has a 4-16 and the Prod which has a 2-7. I had multiple issues with the Prod, it fell out of tune and I could not see the target at 7X so there is only one shot at each target for it. But even at 7X I got acceptable accuracy. The Caiman did the best and I may try it on squirrels. It is plenty powerful pushing 18 grain H&Ns over 900 fps. But I like the P35-22. I like the Prod for short range shots so I do not have to aim so high. The first series of shots with my P35-25 was with it off reg. I get close to 20 shots with this gun at essentially the same velocity (and accuracy) after it goes below the regulator setting (of about 150 bar). The other shots are after I aired it back up. It is pushing 34 grain JSBs (MKII) at just under 800 fps, overkill for squirrels with this pellet and tune. I took all 18 squirrels with it on a much milder tune using H&N FTT pellets but it is more accurate with these big JSBs.
All except the Caiman, the newest, have taken squirrels for me. The P35-25 has taken 18, the Prod 17, the P35-177 12, and the P35-22 10. They all work but I kind of want to use the 177 more. With the Match pellets maybe I can. But my only question mark is the 177. It is also very wind sensitive and that may also play a role.
If you haven't tested your guns after they've sat at least 12 hours and preferably overnight I suggest you should. Sometimes they don't shoot quite the same on the first shot.
View attachment hunting accuracy.pdf