I have tuned my fx maverick .22 sniper several times over the course of the last month or so. Same maverick, same equipment, same NSA 24.8 in .218.
I have had 3 tunes all with the regulator around the same , which is around 125 - 130 bar. None of the two previous tunes can be replicated, probably because I can not get back to the same regulator pressure again. That is surprising to me, every tune gives me a little different speed.
I started at 950 and slowly increased speed to get the accuracy I want. Why 950? I wanted a flat trajectory. So a speed is only a guide. I’ll take whatever speed gives the best accuracy.
I agree a flat flight path is highly desirable in a lot of instances. You have to think about the arc of the projectile on the way to your target/game. A slow projectile is going to have a big arc and a lot of drop. There’s plenty of instances that you potentially hit something that’s higher than your target as the projectile is on a perfect flight path to your target. You also have to think about how the projectile will impact. Say pellet moving at 800fps at 100y is coming DOWN into the target, not straight at it. A sunstantialy heavier slug moving at 980-1020fps is on a much flatter flight path. It’s all about the use case
Lot of opinions here seem to be based on pellets. Pellets and slugs are completely different worlds. A pellet is stabilized by the skirt. A pellet is much lighter. A pellet (ime.. as I live in a VERY windy place) is much more prone to wind drift. I have a ton of fun with low speed pellets to 100y in low to no wind circumstances (indoor range).
But outside, in 10-20mph breezes, shooting targets 100-200y… a fast moving slug is far more consistent and kills are far more humane than any pellet of the same caliber.
The original question still is weird to me? Don’t mean to rock the boat saying that lol. I believe everyone is tuning for accuracy. Nobody wants the projectile to just go wherever. And just like he said in his “response” to me… I don’t have a single friend that waste ammo and time dialing in on the knee of the curve of a fps before knowing the results of said fps are good.
I don’t see it any differently than precision shooters in the powder world doing load development to find their accuracy node.
I guess what I said above would be the answer to the op question. People might be aiming for a given speed with a given weight and BC because of the benefits of it. So if they want a high bc slug moving at high speed for those benefits, they ain’t gunna just load up the projectile and find the node at 800fps. That’s not what they want. They want to find that node at higher speeds.. so they set the rifle up in the middle of its adjustability in the area they HOPE to find a accuracy node at. And adjust till they find it.
Just like politics, cars/trucks, tool brands, clothing choice, and whatever.. everyone has a different use case with different goals. Your way isn’t the correct way. My way isnt the correct way. The correct way is whatever works and meets the end goal of the user. It really doesn’t matter if they guy shooting next to you does it differently if the end result is the same (accuracy wise.. because that is the one thing that we all have in common.. we want accuracy!). Lol