When tuning a gun with a regulator, is there a minimum reg pressure where the gun will start doing not so well?
My experience is with the Taipan Veteran Short .25 caliber. When I bought it a few months ago, I tuned it to 25 FPE with the JSB King 25.39gr. pellets. The reg pressure ended up at 65 bars and the hammer spring tension was tuned to the knee about 2% less than maximum. This tune was shooting the JSB King at 670 FPS. I would zero the rifle and think everything is good only to miss a 27 meter kill shot that requires a follow up shot the next day on a squirrel.
That distance is very comfortable for me as I've went a good stretch with my 30 FPE Veteran Long without missing a shot. I know how that sounds but I'm not trying to brag. I'm just trying to understand if it's really me.
I will then check my zero again at 33 meters and has always been hard keeping it within half an inch or so.
After I missed my last squirrel a few days ago, I decided to re-tune the gun to 32 FPE with the same pellets. The regulator ended up at 95 bars with the pellets going 755 FPS. I've only shot paper yet, but I find it's much easier to hit bullseye with this new tune.
Yes, I know 755 FPS is faster than 670 FPS so I believe it does help with lock time some but I feel it's not the major contributing factor since MANY people are accurate with velocities much slower than 670 FPS. Could it be the pellet is just not accurate at that speed with my barrel? By raising the reg pressure, does the gun now have better harmonics than when it was lower? Is the 95 bar pressure better for this pellet because it accelerates it quicker and creating a better seal when compared to the slow acceleration at 65 bar reg?
These are some of the variables that I think is affecting my gun. I'm starting to believe that for a particular gun/pellet combination, there might be an ideal reg pressure that will allow the projectile to seal against the barrel properly and accelerate it fast enough and have time to settle down before exiting the barrel. I don't know... I'm not too versed in this stuff but I'm just reporting what I'm seeing and experiencing firsthand.
My experience is with the Taipan Veteran Short .25 caliber. When I bought it a few months ago, I tuned it to 25 FPE with the JSB King 25.39gr. pellets. The reg pressure ended up at 65 bars and the hammer spring tension was tuned to the knee about 2% less than maximum. This tune was shooting the JSB King at 670 FPS. I would zero the rifle and think everything is good only to miss a 27 meter kill shot that requires a follow up shot the next day on a squirrel.
That distance is very comfortable for me as I've went a good stretch with my 30 FPE Veteran Long without missing a shot. I know how that sounds but I'm not trying to brag. I'm just trying to understand if it's really me.
I will then check my zero again at 33 meters and has always been hard keeping it within half an inch or so.
After I missed my last squirrel a few days ago, I decided to re-tune the gun to 32 FPE with the same pellets. The regulator ended up at 95 bars with the pellets going 755 FPS. I've only shot paper yet, but I find it's much easier to hit bullseye with this new tune.
Yes, I know 755 FPS is faster than 670 FPS so I believe it does help with lock time some but I feel it's not the major contributing factor since MANY people are accurate with velocities much slower than 670 FPS. Could it be the pellet is just not accurate at that speed with my barrel? By raising the reg pressure, does the gun now have better harmonics than when it was lower? Is the 95 bar pressure better for this pellet because it accelerates it quicker and creating a better seal when compared to the slow acceleration at 65 bar reg?
These are some of the variables that I think is affecting my gun. I'm starting to believe that for a particular gun/pellet combination, there might be an ideal reg pressure that will allow the projectile to seal against the barrel properly and accelerate it fast enough and have time to settle down before exiting the barrel. I don't know... I'm not too versed in this stuff but I'm just reporting what I'm seeing and experiencing firsthand.