Been shooting the Condor a fair amount in the last week or so...
Mounted a PARD and am having a ball shooting prairie dogs. In case you missed it....
I've been playing with a Condor since late July, just couldnt resist their 4th of July sale. https://www.airgunnation.com/threads/air-force-condor-review-a-case-report-in-how-utilitarian-can-be-a-positive.1316178/page-2 Late yesterday evening I decided to put the PARD on it to see how it would...
www.airgunnation.com
Those two short videos are all with .20/15.89 JSB pellets at 920-950fps. Today I spent a bit of time with the gun and some of the .20/18.9 NSA slugs. And here's how that went....
The same settings that net 40ish shots from 1800-1400psi, pushing the .20/15.89 to 920-950, are pushing the .20/18.9 to 850fps. With that knowledge, I added another profile to the PARD scope and worked through some dope. A neat feature of the PARD is that it allows various profiles, and within each of those profiles a guy can zero for a particular projectile or speed, and also plug in the ballistic info so that the built-in holdover calculator is accurate to that projectile and speed.
So now I've got a profile for the .20/15.89 pellets, and a profile for the .20/18.9gr slugs, with corresponding ballistic programs, attached to each profile. What this means is that I can switch from pellet to slug, as the specific shot and conditions warrant, without needing to rezero or change any of the guns adjustments.
During the shooting today I refined the pellet profile a bit, and tweaked the parameters in both of the ballistic profiles (pellet and slug) to match up at 30, 55, 100, and 130 yards.
I found that the BC of the .20/15.89 is a bit lower than the norm, needing to be 0.046. I'm fairly certain this is because these pellets really prefer to be moving in the 910-920fps range. In that 910-920fps window they have produced a BC of 0.048 for me, across lots and lots of tins of pellets, and a couple different guns, and over a couple years.
And I also needed to bring the BC of the .20/18.9 slugs down a bit lower than the peak of what theyre capable of. Also from shooting lots and lots of these slugs, they produce a BC of 0.09 at both 870-880 fps and again at 905-915fps. A good friend cites 0.1 as a BC when they're going around 930fps. From the Condor @ 850fps, I needed to input a BC of 0.080 for the computer predicted trajectory to match up to actual trajectory.
Here are 2 x 3 shot groups with the slugs @ 55 yards....
And @ 1 x 8 shot group at 100, also with the slugs....(Stopped at 8 because I got to that refill point of 1400psi mark on the gauge and expected the next couple shots to be low in fps)
The cool thing about the 100 yard group is the vertical of about 0.75" The horizontal is about 1.75", and I had a pretty stiff crss wind stretching it so that was to be expected. Not the type of accuracy I'm going to complain about! (And yes it's a bit lower than desired impact point, this and some more shots is why I lowered the BC a bit in the program) .
So, I'll likely get some more pesting footage, now with slugs too. I'm enjoying making the videos much more than I suspect any one is enjoying watching them. But I'm having fun and that's what matters.
As for the Condor in general.....the dang thing has surprised me in just about every way. It's accurate. It's got a pretty decent trigger. It's nearly silent with the moderator I'm running. It's fun to shoot. And it's very sippy on the air, especially with only needing to be filled to 1800psi. And now in combo with the PARD with the built in rangefinder and ballistics app, well, it has made itself a niche amongst my airguns.
I'm sure some of the excitement and enjoyment is just cuz it's new to me but, bout the only thing I can fault it for is the length. The "Condor" name sure fits, black and a huge wingspan.
I've certainly got more refined airguns, and that refinement comes at a literal cost $$$. There's sure something to be said about simplifying though, and just enjoying a tool that does it's intended use quite well. There are certainly no embellishments or excess features with the Air Force utility line, but this one does what it's supposed to (be relied upon to put a projectile where I want it to go) and it's quite enjoyable to use while it's doing that.
I'm a fan.