Good post. My Maverick .25cal is running about the same power as yours (33.49 at 995fps). In my state, TN, a .25cal air gun is the biggest you can hunt coyotes with.
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50Well he has a 25 cal Gauntlet 2 and a 22 cal Avenger, but neither shoot slugs very well. He hit a racoon in the skull recently with his 50-55ft-lb Gauntlet 2 and using a pellet it bounced off and only stunned it. He is in the market for something more powerful, like an AEA perhaps. We are both well seasoned hunters but new to air. My guess is the pellet alloy is very soft, and many slugs are as well. Not really a lot of info out there when it comes to alloy composition, so first hand experience would tell us a lot. I think the issue with air is going to be penetration so it would seem a harder alloy would be better.
Well I can't comment on the pellet bouncing off the scull I've never had that happen before but for that high of ft-lbs I wouldn't hesitate to take a body shot on a coon or coyote with a jsb diablo 25.39 or better yet the 34 grain diablo or hades all would be great options as for an area I would stay away from the semiautos I have one and have had a lot of problems with it I don't have any experience with the non semiautos but it seems like they would be less prone to problems but I would go for vitals or head if you can get it just my take the one at the top of the thread was taken with a vitals shotWell he has a 25 cal Gauntlet 2 and a 22 cal Avenger, but neither shoot slugs very well. He hit a racoon in the skull recently with his 50-55ft-lb Gauntlet 2 and using a pellet it bounced off and only stunned it. He is in the market for something more powerful, like an AEA perhaps. We are both well seasoned hunters but new to air. My guess is the pellet alloy is very soft, and many slugs are as well. Not really a lot of info out there when it comes to alloy composition, so first hand experience would tell us a lot. I think the issue with air is going to be penetration so it would seem a harder alloy would be better.
This is kinda of what Im getting at. The regular H&N slugs are reportedly a harder lead alloy than say a Javelin. There are lots of differences in hardness among lead alloys used in the air industry. Im trying to figure it all out, and have limited hunting experience with slugs. But I know lots of you guys have been around the block a few times lol.50fpsfpe with a JSB Exact or most any slug is plenty for a headshot kill shot, if that headshot is between the eye and ear.
You don't want the harder, unleaded ammo, because you lose too much power because of the weight reduction.
You just have to take the proper shot. I've killed several raccoons with less powerful .25 cal airguns with headshots using H&N Grizzly slugs with ease. Right between the eye and ear activates the raccoon break dance of death.
Good tips thanks. We were looking at the bolt or side lever versions of the aea, simple is better =)Well I can't comment on the pellet bouncing off the scull I've never had that happen before but for that high of ft-lbs I wouldn't hesitate to take a body shot on a coon or coyote with a jsb diablo 25.39 or better yet the 34 grain diablo or hades all would be great options as for an area I would stay away from the semiautos I have one and have had a lot of problems with it I don't have any experience with the non semiautos but it seems like they would be less prone to problems but I would go for vitals or head if you can get it just my take the one at the top of the thread was taken with a vitals shot
Another guy that does some airgun coyote hunting on YouTube is air rifle pestingsGood tips thanks. We were looking at the bolt or side lever versions of the aea, simple is better =)
Hello mate,It's not about power or pellet, it's about angle !
I've been criticised in the past for taking Wild boar with 50-60 FPE .22 or .25 ( a couple times much less then that ) people come tell me " I shot one with my 30/30 between the eyes and it just bounced off "......well yeaahh doh, that is the wrong shot to take because the skull is so slanted it will just bounce,
need to wait for the head to go down and take a square shot a couple inches above the eye line, .......same for a quartering shot it will just bounce
Key is to take a square shot either broadside between eye and ear or as mentioned above the eye line
Take a look at this video, that big boar was just not in the perfect position for 10 minutes ( just quartering away ) so patience becames key,
Took the risk of it spooking and taking off but I waited 10 minutes ( that is a Looong time ) but as soon as he gave me the square broadside I took the shot,.........25 cal between 55-60 FPE
I wish that were true in Alabama. We are visiting the In-laws and the Al regs are nothing smaller than .30. I'd rather use the .22 at 1000FPS vs the .30 at 800FPS and lobbing in artillery rounds.Good post. My Maverick .25cal is running about the same power as yours (33.49 at 995fps). In my state, TN, a .25cal air gun is the biggest you can hunt coyotes with.
I guess it's just preference but thanks for the postI think it's important to remember a few things we all know. Slugs have better bc and almost all are hollow points with a better chance of expanding than a lot of pellets. But they do not magically turn an airgun into something more powerful. They are better at long range shots but I wouldn't bother (and don't) inside 50 yards. It is also harder finding one your gun likes in my experience.
To kill an animal we have to make a large enough deep enough hole to either critically destroy it's central nervous system or shut down it's blood supply capacity. Hit it's brain or heart/lungs. Putting the projectile into the right spot is by far the most important criteria. Next is sufficient penetation. I think a 25 caliber with 50 fpe or less should stick with a non-expanding projectile for a coyote to ensure enough penetration. That is my suggestion, not a law of nature or anything. I would further suggest a heavy for caliber projectile. A JSB 33.95 would be first choice but a H&N Baracuda would also be good if more accurate. I would expect a body shot coyote with a 25 caliber projectile that does not expand to run. If that is a problem, I would shoot it in the head. A smaller caliber with less fpe would also make a clean kill with a head shot. If you have plenty of fpe for penetration, then and only then would I think about an expanding projectile to make a wider hole. I do not think wider holes mean much if anything on brain shots but I'm convinced they do on body shots.
If the subject shooter can reliably put a pellet into the brain of the subject coyote I think he has enough gun. I think he can also kill it with a body shot but it may go some distance before it realizes it is dead. If you need to anchor it with a body shot, I would want a larger caliber.
I agree. And that's why a number of 22 cal air rifles are easily suitable for coyote. Although 42 ft lbs will do if you hit the kill button while retaining enough down range energy. For frontal shots I like starting at over 50ft lbs setup. I did video 3 kilt Coyotes with airgun this year. All with 25 cal. It's lethal as fTo me it’s a lot more about fpe and projectile weight/speed than caliber. There is a huge difference in your 25 cal setup than a run of the mill 42 ft/lb rig shooting 25.39 pellets.
At the muzzle,....if I mention FPE of a gun it will always be at the muzzle, on this particular hunt I was shooting the 28gr Benjamin pellet.Hello mate,
The boar seems to be arnd 35 yards. When you said......."25 cal between 55 to 60 fpe " (lastline), was it at the muzzle or the terminal end ??
Regards
Thanks for the reply.At the muzzle,....if I mention FPE of a gun it will always be at the muzzle, on this particular hunt I was shooting the 28gr Benjamin pellet.