https://hardairmagazine.com/ham-columns/tuning-regulated-pcp-airguns/
From what I can tell, this article is saying that if you turn the hammer spring in (in means increased spring compression) you get to a state where air is being spent after the pellet has already left the barrel. The 'plateau' in his terminology. But that turning the spring out too far can lead to a higher standard deviation in shot speeds. That the hammer tapped the valve on its sweet spot and stayed open longer, you held your mouth wrong and the valve closed early, etc. For the author, the most efficient setting to give you the lowest standard deviation is to turn the hammer spring down until your shot speeds are around 3% lower than the maximum possible shot speed. So if the plateau is 1000 fps (round number), that you turn the hammer spring in until you get no increase in speed, then you turn the hammer spring out until you get to 970 fps.
What I'm asking is, "Did I get this right?" Because it seems like a fairly simple recipe to follow. We get the benefit of the author's research, and crank the spring in until the speed doesn't change, then crank it out until it drops a little bit. Viola!
From what I can tell, this article is saying that if you turn the hammer spring in (in means increased spring compression) you get to a state where air is being spent after the pellet has already left the barrel. The 'plateau' in his terminology. But that turning the spring out too far can lead to a higher standard deviation in shot speeds. That the hammer tapped the valve on its sweet spot and stayed open longer, you held your mouth wrong and the valve closed early, etc. For the author, the most efficient setting to give you the lowest standard deviation is to turn the hammer spring down until your shot speeds are around 3% lower than the maximum possible shot speed. So if the plateau is 1000 fps (round number), that you turn the hammer spring in until you get no increase in speed, then you turn the hammer spring out until you get to 970 fps.
What I'm asking is, "Did I get this right?" Because it seems like a fairly simple recipe to follow. We get the benefit of the author's research, and crank the spring in until the speed doesn't change, then crank it out until it drops a little bit. Viola!