I am waiting for the 100 shot Magazines with "scope sight hole" in the middle so you can see your scope .
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Old wives' tale... Some do, but those are borderline slugs unstable to start with. A STABLE slug should easily fly at 850 to 1050 fps without any change in accuracy.I thought that everyone was shooting slugs faster and faster because that's what the slugs needed to fly accurately in these guns with slower twist barrels than are ideal.
Exactly... If it makes you feel better, the sky's the limit. But there are MANY more reasons to shoot them slow than fast. And if I hear "flat" one more time I think I'll puke... NO SLUGS TRAJECTORIES ARE FLAT!!!I think that about sums it up. Additional factors: 1) Ted made a video getting his best accuracy at 1100fps, 2) The South African crew (often, but not always) showcases very hot slug tunes. One of them recently discovered the joys of light 21gr slugs so it has been nice to see that make it into the rotation.
Harsh shot cycle, low shot count, and extensive power mods don't appeal to me. You don't have to shoot over 1000fps to gain the benefits slugs offer vs pellets. 950fps vs 1050 fps is a ~50bar reg increase! I've personally been having fun seeing what I can get out of slugs in the 650fps range.
I'm still not sure what you are trying to say... It seems you're saying BC has little to do with wind drift? TOF is a factor, so slower has more drift than faster? I'm not sure I understand what you are saying?I respect everyone's opinion, but clearly my statement was misinterpreted. maybe fad was the wrong word. let me just say that if you believe wind drift comes from BC then you may not have a true understanding of what it is. the coefficient of friction on a forward moving object does not determine the horizontal force applied to said object. what BC does do is alter the TOF thereby changing how long the horizontal force is applied. drift still remains the same as it is x force over x time. now, as it applies to the original question, by increasing speed of the slug you can and will achieve the same outcome to a point. basically, one can make up for the other in certain circumstances. for guys who have been shooting long enough we do not look at BC or speed or any one thing. we look at all variables and use what is most accurate at the needed distance. again, my term may have been wrong. it was meant to be the same as the original question since the 2 are directly related, so maybe I should have said fetish.
I've noticed lately that more and more shooters of airgun slugs are increasingly looking for higher speeds... My question is why?
What is the benefit of shooting faster, say 1050 compared to 900 fps?
Wind drift isn't better. Yes, the shots are "flatter", but really, with distances known, does that make a difference?
The gun gets less shots per fill, and is harder to shoot accurately, so what is the reasoning other than psychological?
Nope, no axe. Let me link this article so you can educate yourself on wind drift, BC and why they are related. It’s a common misconception that faster equals less wind drift. That’s a fallacy for subsonic projectiles.It doesn't sound like you want an answer, sounds like you got an ax to sharpen.
Also, wind drift is better due to less time the slug has in the wind before impact so actual drift is less. Enough to matter? Probably not physics says you cant have both "flatter" and "Wind drift isn't better" at the same time, it just doesn't work that way.
As far as the "why" goes, I have slugs that hydraulically open at 1000fps but hardly move at 900fps. I choose 1050-1100fps to dump all the energy in critters but like 900fps for the rest of my shooting as long as as accuracy is good.
There you go, why?I do think the speed to open your hollow points better is a good reason for higher speed.
Fast slugging means flat shootin’ on a flat earth dog. The more flat on flat the betterExactly... If it makes you feel better, the sky's the limit. But there are MANY more reasons to shoot them slow than fast. And if I hear "flat" one more time I think I'll puke... NO SLUGS TRAJECTORIES ARE FLAT!!!
I’m thinking we’ll have agree to disagree. But at least read the science. Let me know if you think they are wrong also?just saw the links so let me give you this to think on. faster absolutely = less drift because if it didn't then BC would not exist.
I've noticed lately that more and more shooters of airgun slugs are increasingly looking for higher speeds... My question is why?
What is the benefit of shooting faster, say 1050 compared to 900 fps?
Wind drift isn't better. Yes, the shots are "flatter", but really, with distances known, does that make a difference?
The gun gets less shots per fill, and is harder to shoot accurately, so what is the reasoning other than psychological?
Just setup my ruger with some see through mounts."With distances known". That's the key for me. I put a lot of priority on "flatness" of trajectory. Because I am 90% hunter and 10% target shooter. So 90% of the time my targets are moving around, and if that causes me to be just 5-10yrds off in my range estimation, an extra 100-200fps can mean the difference between a clean kill, a clean miss, or the worst case: a wounded animal. The increased flatness also means, in general, less clicking of turrets or changing of holdover points since the target is dynamic, and this can be critical when I may only have a few seconds to decide to squeeze the trigger or not.
Really just a different problem set compared to shooting at a bench with a range finder and stationary targets. Which I also enjoy doing. About 10% of the time...
I used those on my 50 cal muzzle loader. I often had a lot of close shots on deer.Just setup my ruger with some see through mounts.
Can't decide whether to sight the scope for distance or the irons.
*I'm thinking irons for close and scope for far....but isnt that what most setups like this are done like?...prolly try both ways....irons for far and scope for close
Guess I just gotta see which way I feel more comfortable utilizing them