Freaking nutation. I've had a couple rifles that did it bad. A pellet will take a nutated path when it's flight is disturbed. It does not get more stable with range like a bullet.
I think anything that disrupts flight will cause it. Gusty tailwind will. I've seen it happen when the sun sets over your shoulder and you can see the flight of the pellet. But some guns just toss them corkscrew with no external forces.
I think it's an uneven crown or a patch of lead or steel disrupting the pellet as it exits the barrel. Just a hunch but it seemed to disappear after I worked on the crown a bit. A super dirty barrel that is tossing strays will do it a lot. A couple patches and it is much less.
Anything can cause it I think. You just have to eliminate the main culprits to find what it is. In my experience it has been some obstruction near the muzzle. A piece of 1000 grit paper rolled into a cone and carefully dressing the crown has helped the most.
Some guys are afraid to even polish the crown and I think that's ridiculous if the crown is rough. If it's a bit out of square polishing won't work and the pellet will always take a nutated path.
I've cut and recrowned a lot of rifle barrels. Polished every one. Have had good luck. I think that would go for airguns doubly. If the pellet is constantly destabilizing over distance it would seem more important than a bullet which is gaining stability over distance. It's just a hunch but it has worked for me in practice.
I think anything that disrupts flight will cause it. Gusty tailwind will. I've seen it happen when the sun sets over your shoulder and you can see the flight of the pellet. But some guns just toss them corkscrew with no external forces.
I think it's an uneven crown or a patch of lead or steel disrupting the pellet as it exits the barrel. Just a hunch but it seemed to disappear after I worked on the crown a bit. A super dirty barrel that is tossing strays will do it a lot. A couple patches and it is much less.
Anything can cause it I think. You just have to eliminate the main culprits to find what it is. In my experience it has been some obstruction near the muzzle. A piece of 1000 grit paper rolled into a cone and carefully dressing the crown has helped the most.
Some guys are afraid to even polish the crown and I think that's ridiculous if the crown is rough. If it's a bit out of square polishing won't work and the pellet will always take a nutated path.
I've cut and recrowned a lot of rifle barrels. Polished every one. Have had good luck. I think that would go for airguns doubly. If the pellet is constantly destabilizing over distance it would seem more important than a bullet which is gaining stability over distance. It's just a hunch but it has worked for me in practice.
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