Fantastic research, testing and information, sir!
I doubt that anyone outside of the Umarex R&D dept. has put as much time and effort into the Canex as you have.
My hat is off to you for your tech savvy, too. The trigger pull videos are nice. (I am a flip phone guy. My Mrs. gave me this device so I can communicate with fellow airgunners.)
The peeps look very good, and I have no doubt you will continue to perfect them.
jIC you haven't done it already, just cleaning the barrel usually makes a difference in accuracy (most airgun barrels are downright filthy out of the box). IMO, the mild steel used in airgun barrels is best lapped with JB bore paste and a nylon brush. This combo will polish nicely and not damage rifling.
As to the most accurate pellet for a particular air rifle, my experience is to feed the air rifle a variety of pellets and it will decide which ones it likes best. More expensive/higher quality does not necessarily mean more accurate, it just means more consistent in size and weight and final cleaning. I have many air rifles that shoot more accurately with Walmart Crosman Premier Hollow Points than with JSB's.
My favorite air rifles are the ones that like cheap pellets best. For even better results I can just clean them with dish soap, remove the peewee's and jumbo's, and then hit the bullseye for less the 2 cents apiece.
I doubt that anyone outside of the Umarex R&D dept. has put as much time and effort into the Canex as you have.
My hat is off to you for your tech savvy, too. The trigger pull videos are nice. (I am a flip phone guy. My Mrs. gave me this device so I can communicate with fellow airgunners.)
The peeps look very good, and I have no doubt you will continue to perfect them.
jIC you haven't done it already, just cleaning the barrel usually makes a difference in accuracy (most airgun barrels are downright filthy out of the box). IMO, the mild steel used in airgun barrels is best lapped with JB bore paste and a nylon brush. This combo will polish nicely and not damage rifling.
As to the most accurate pellet for a particular air rifle, my experience is to feed the air rifle a variety of pellets and it will decide which ones it likes best. More expensive/higher quality does not necessarily mean more accurate, it just means more consistent in size and weight and final cleaning. I have many air rifles that shoot more accurately with Walmart Crosman Premier Hollow Points than with JSB's.
My favorite air rifles are the ones that like cheap pellets best. For even better results I can just clean them with dish soap, remove the peewee's and jumbo's, and then hit the bullseye for less the 2 cents apiece.
Upvote 0