Increasing crown hammer weight

You can always squish a pellet between the hammer and weight. Adds minimal length to the assembly and is fast and basically free. Play with weights.

You don't want to do that for long. Once the pellet flattens, it will eventually start to flake and turn into nasty crap that makes a mess inside of the action.

Have you experienced that? I had one in for quite a while in the Royale at 60+fpe and never had it flaking. I packed it into place and it stayed together.
 
If you know what reg pressure you want to support, you can get the hammer weight precise - 12.6 grams was what it took to open the valve all the way to 180+ bar (ysing modified spring guide), I just wound up using that full time for all higher pressure tunes, and decided to use an unmodified spring guide with no weight for lighter tunes (up to 145bar or so, which is what the factory setup could handle on my rifle). 
 
Yours is 22 caliber as well? Or 25? I feel I'm at the ceiling for flow capability on the 22. Without doing some type of extreme modification... Mine also seemed to like 30gr the best as far as utilizing volume and expansion is concerned. 

And the gun loses efficiency or power on either side of 155bar regardless of hammer tension. (maybe it's actually 160 and my gauge is a bit off?) But my current tune shoots 25gr slugs @950fps. The gun can shoot them around 1050, but there's too much turbulence or vibration
 
Whew! That's smokin! I havnt really seen any projectiles that like being pushed that hard. But I might try a 9gr weight and test the 36gr boat tails again. Something just wasn't clicking with them. But 2/3 were hole in hole at 100 yards 1/3 were about 3-4" off 🤔 all the boat tail slugs I have like low speeds, though. 920 and less fps. But I could only get 36gr up to about 880. 

I do have a slew of various weights and designs of projectiles I need to test. I should probably get back out and do that, haha. 



Thanks again for sharing your experience.