I remember shooting my beretta airgun (.177 cal, 12G CO2 canister) and knowing it does 6 layers of cardboard.
A week later, new canister - as in fresh canister, now it only does 4 layers. Not really the biggest difference, but something to consider.
And going even further back, I just swear that 1-2 years ago I remember that airgun being really really powerful. (Could just be memory playing tricks on me.)
Anyway, i'm very very new to these things and I really only know different calibers, types of pellets (bb vs shaped), feet-per-second, and that there's 2 different types of canisters.
Basically, I wonder if anyone knows if my gun may be underpowered. Shot dispersion even from garage start to garage end isn't that amazing. I'd say that halfway across the garage, shot accuracy is nearly my fist. (I'm not a great shot though)
But the 4 layers of cardboard seems.... off. I just seem to remember the gun being rather terrifying safety-wise in the past, and 4 layers of cardboard truly seeming low.
Any help or advice? is the seal bad?
A week later, new canister - as in fresh canister, now it only does 4 layers. Not really the biggest difference, but something to consider.
And going even further back, I just swear that 1-2 years ago I remember that airgun being really really powerful. (Could just be memory playing tricks on me.)
Anyway, i'm very very new to these things and I really only know different calibers, types of pellets (bb vs shaped), feet-per-second, and that there's 2 different types of canisters.
Basically, I wonder if anyone knows if my gun may be underpowered. Shot dispersion even from garage start to garage end isn't that amazing. I'd say that halfway across the garage, shot accuracy is nearly my fist. (I'm not a great shot though)
But the 4 layers of cardboard seems.... off. I just seem to remember the gun being rather terrifying safety-wise in the past, and 4 layers of cardboard truly seeming low.
Any help or advice? is the seal bad?