More on Pellet Weighing...
I think its time to bump this subject back to the top...
The subject of this thread is "Pellet weighing"...
I'd like to expand the thread subject to read "Benefits of Pellet weighing for competition shooting"
Now that I have a couple of PCP guns that are showing great promise, I find myself being frustrated by having a good target going and suddenly have a shot unexplainably show up in the 9 or 8 ring while the gun stays positioned in the rest with the scope crosshairs still centered on the 10 ring in the center of the target. This often happens after shooting 8 or 10 or 12 clean 10X shots in a row and on several occasions, I have made it to bullseye #25, and carefully squeeze of the last shot needed to finish and have it be a flier.
So, I have been on a quest to try and figure out what causes this to happen when I'm positive that it is not me or my gun causing the problem. There are times when I get careless and screw up for lack of a better way of putting it, but I know when those times are and I can account for errant shots that I produce by my own fault. I also know by the sound of the gun firing and how the gun reacts and recoils when something is amiss with the way the gun functions. However after hundreds of targets and thousands of shots with the two guns I am presently shooting, there is a small number of random shots that differ from the POA when all is right without any explanation and I've become convinced this is a pellet anomally of some sort.
This has lead me to spending a lot of time recently inspecting pellets, first visually, then rolling them on a flat surface to see how smoothly they roll or wobble as the case may be, and finally I have come back to my original question of pellet weight and its effect.
I have a number of scales, both digital and analog, and quickly came to the conclusion that having a resolution of 1/10 grain, while allowed me to see some variation in a 10.5 grain pellet, mainly that there is a variation of a couple tenths of a grain from the manufacturers stated weight, and that pellets, even match grade, do vary a couple tenths one way or the other through a tin. I started grouping them as best I could by weight and this did seem to have me headed in the right direction. I was reducing the number of unexplained fliers by weight sorting the pellets as best I could using what I had to work with.
At this point I was quite certain that what I was finding as pellet weight extremes from one end of the weight range to the other in a given tin was what was causing the fliers. If a pellet of lowest weight or highest weight is randomly mixed in with a group of pellets of the nominal weight range which seems to be the majority in a tin, and you are adjusting your point of aim slightly to allow for small variations and suddenly get a pellet of weight at the other end of the range of those you are presently shooting, the end result is a shift in POI that you are not expecting...
Therefore, encouraged by what I'm seeing of weight variations as a potential cause of the unaccountable fliers, I spent several days researching scales to see what was available that would have better resolution for what I was attempting to accomplish. The end result of my research led me to purchasing an "Acculab" VIC-123 digital milligram scale that has a number of features and programming functions that gives me resolution of 0.02 grain, has a fast response time, and would be easy to use without costing an arm and a leg.
http://www.affordablescales.com/scales_specs.asp?specs=558
Several days ago my new Acculab VIC-123 scale arrived, and its no disappointment! Very nicely made, easy to set up, and in minutes, I was weighing pellets. Even for being very cold as it has been in unheated UPS trucks for three days getting to me, this scale is showing me what I wanted to see right off...
First thing I did was to weigh a couple dozen pellets simply to see what the range of weights is, the pellets I used to start my refined experiment are Crosman Premier Heavy 10.5gn per the manufacturer. Only reason for choosing this pellet is I had an open box sitting on my bench that I had been testing and shooting with good luck and they were the first in reach once I had the scale setup.
What I found by weighing several dozen of these 10.5 gn pellets was that the weight ranged from 10.4gn to 10.84gn as I selected them at random from the box they came in. This is a total weight variation of 3% and I was quite surprised to find it to be what I consider extreme. What needs to be done to correlate this to POA/POI variations is to measure changes in velocity cause by weight and calculate and graph the effects on external ballistics however I do not have a chronograph so have to act on the assumption that a 3% variation in weight has to have some effect although I do not know exactly what it is at present. I can only assume there is an effect that is present based on my knowledge acquired of years of working with precision shooting and ballistics. Someday, I'll have to add a chronograph to my collection of tools but for the moment am satisfied that an effect of the 3% weight variation must exist.
At this point, after letting the scale come up to room temperature and stabilize, I decided the next step in looking for cause and effect,was to set up a number of pellet tin lids with labels, 10.40, 10.45, 10.50, 10.55, 10.60, 10,65, 10.70, 10.75 and I started weighing pellets.
Here is a tip for anyone attempting this, I quickly learned to place a disc of the foam that comes in JSB pellet tins on the scale stainless platform and use a pair of large tweezers to pick up an place pellets on the foam pad. If you zero the scale with the foam pad in place, the scale displays the tare weight of the pellet and not the pad and the pad keeps the pellets from rolling all over the small stainless platform as you try to pick them up.
Once I had pellets in groups as labeled plus or minus .02gn, the largest group was the 10.6gn and I proceeded to set up a gun on my test range and shot a clean target with no fliers!!!
In the past two days, I have repeated this process a number of times with the .177 gun and then switched to the .22 cal gun and a tin of JSB Exact Jumbo Heavy 18.0gn pellets. What I found as I started weighing the pellets was a repeat situation I had found with the .177 pellets and that was a variation in weight ranging from 17.90 to 18.84 with one or two outside that range of extremes. Again it is a 3% weight variation found in one tin of pellets.
Again I weighed pellets into groups of .05gn difference, and found the largest groups to be 18.15gn and 18.2gn and I proceeded to shoot a couple targets with these weight sorted pellets and again had two clean targets with no fliers...
Over a couple of days of testing, I have come to the conclusion (probably prematurely as I'm just getting started) that weight sorting does work when you are looking for that one or two point edge required to win a benchrest match... I say this may be a premature conclusion as I've only been at this a week and have not tried weight sorted pellets in a match yet and I'm still way down on the learning curve about precision PCP airgun shooting...
In any case I'm pleased with how this experiment is going, I think I've found the result and explanation I was looking for and want to lay it on the table for discussion...
Ok, Y'all, Comments and suggestions, please...
Happy Shooting, Y'all...
Mitch & Shadow...