I'm not a hunter but I'm just curious what is the acceptable group size parameter that you must keep it in to determine what distance you would use an air gun to hunt? Dime, nickel, quarter or other??
Not necessarily. Accuracy is always supreme.Depends on the game, and you own ability. Small requires a more accurate gun. Big game requires a more powerful gun.
A .45 that will produce 3.5” groups at 100 yards off the bench combined with your in the field hold of + 1.5” puts you at a 5” group at 100 in the field, enough to double lung a white tail. A .20 that does 1” at 100 off a bench puts you at 2.5” at 100 in the field. It isn’t strong enough to double lung a white tail at 100. It may not be strong enough to puncture skull at 100. Even if it does puncture skull the outer edges of the 2.5“ may not kill the deer but leave it impaired where it dies a slow painful death from disease. Point being is accuracy is NOT ”always supreme”.Not necessarily. Accuracy is always supreme.
I try to keep my shots inside a half inch, but that said, things do happen and not always for the better. Shooting at the bench will always produce better groups than in the field.
Accuracy IS always supreme. No matter the caliber, no matter the distance. It's up to the shooter to know his and his equipments limits. The question was about ethical kills. Your examples, while valid, only pertain to the 2% of idiots that would take those shots. A double lung shot is not anymore guaranteed with a .45 as with a .20. Too many variables come in to play at the squeeze of the trigger. It's seen with archery as deer duck the arrow and squirrels ducking the pellet at further distances. The longer the shot, the more time an animal has to react when it hears the sound before the projectile gets there. Suppressors do help with that, though. When you know the limits and stay within them, accuracy is ALWAYS supreme.A .45 that will produce 3.5” groups at 100 yards off the bench combined with your in the field hold of + 1.5” puts you at a 5” group at 100 in the field, enough to double lung a white tail. A .20 that does 1” at 100 off a bench puts you at 2.5” at 100 in the field. It isn’t strong enough to double lung a white tail at 100. It may not be strong enough to puncture skull at 100. Even if it does puncture skull the outer edges of the 2.5“ may not kill the deer but leave it impaired where it dies a slow painful death from disease. Point being is accuracy is NOT ”always supreme”.
Nickel size = minute of tree rat brain @ 40 yardsI'm not a hunter but I'm just curious what is the acceptable group size parameter that you must keep it in to determine what distance you would use an air gun to hunt? Dime, nickel, quarter or other??
Did you see this from Coyote hunter?I'm not a hunter but I'm just curious what is the acceptable group size parameter that you must keep it in to determine what distance you would use an air gun to hunt? Dime, nickel, quarter or other??
To what i suggested above..I appreciate the replies from everyone but I was just looking for the group size/distance that's acceptable . When I shot in my garage with an air gun 7yds I would "like" to keep it within a dime. At the range 15 yd I with a crosman carbine I "try" for 1". At 25 yds I'm happy with 1.5". I was just curious and a dime at 25 yds and a nickel at 40yd I'm going to have to get a better rifle, cause you know that would be the solution.
I don't see this , if you shoot dime size groups @100 @ your range why do you say it opens up to much larger in the field . or Maybe your standing free hand ? I do not shoot freehand ever , either prown or braced on a solid tree , or i just do not take the shot.A .45 that will produce 3.5” groups at 100 yards off the bench combined with your in the field hold of + 1.5” puts you at a 5” group at 100 in the field, enough to double lung a white tail. A .20 that does 1” at 100 off a bench puts you at 2.5” at 100 in the field. It isn’t strong enough to double lung a white tail at 100. It may not be strong enough to puncture skull at 100. Even if it does puncture skull the outer edges of the 2.5“ may not kill the deer but leave it impaired where it dies a slow painful death from disease. Point being is accuracy is NOT ”always supreme”.
Without getting into the actual numbers. The criteria is that you are able to place the projectile into the “kill zone” aka hitting the vitals (lungs, heart or brain (not just any “headshot”). Shutting down the central nervous system. All living things have specific places where a projectile will put them down fast. An ethical hunter learns the size and place of these zones on the animals they intend to hunt. Then it’s up to the individual to know their, and their equipments limitations “in the field”.I'm not a hunter but I'm just curious what is the acceptable group size parameter that you must keep it in to determine what distance you would use an air gun to hunt? Dime, nickel, quarter or other??
For me it was bottle caps. ...I'm from the time before aluminum pop cans and pull-tabsGrowing up, I'd shoot red milk jug caps, which are the size of a squirrel's vitals. For group size, I prefer a three-leaf clover with all the holes touching. This will have all the bullets hitting within the center of the crosshair. Many a squirrel fell peaking through the fork of a branch.