air rifles; .177 or .22?

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WoodsmanJim

Forager
Oct 27, 2013
205
7
Wirral
First thing would be, what do you want to use it for?

I'll do my best to outline the differences between them and leave it to you decide which one you want. all comparisons are 'pound for pound', i.e. all things being equal other than calibre.

.177 has a flatter trajectory as it's a smaller, lighter pellet and travels much faster than .22. This makes it more forgiving from a marksmanship point of view as range estimation isn't as critical. This is due to less holdover/ holdunder being required when aiming at different ranges, if you're a few yards out with your range estimation it won't make too much difference. As it travels faster it'll get to it's target quicker too.
A smaller faster projectile will pass through and soft target (animal) easier, when this happens it means it's not delivering all of it's force into the target.

.22 is basically the opposite of the above. .22 rarely passes through an animal giving rise to the phrase "more stopping power", but the truth is either are fine for hunting as if you put the pellet in the right place it'll make the kill. it's true a .22 "hits harder" but you have to be on top of your marksmanship to be as accurate as a .177, especially when shooting spring piston rifles.

.177 pellets are cheaper.

for target shooting most people use .177 for the flatter trajectory and smaller pellet holes (meaning you can fit more individual holes in a target card). For hunting there is much debate!! but as I said either does fine and I hunt with both with success.

hope this helps.

Jim
 

WoodsmanJim

Forager
Oct 27, 2013
205
7
Wirral
I now realise my previous reply was kind of pointless as there are 100 other replies!!! for some reason I couldn't see them when I first viewed the thread. ??

This forum does seem to struggle with weird thread layouts....

Jim
 

johnbaz

Nomad
Mar 1, 2009
322
43
Sheffield, england.
www.flickr.com
Hi all

Here's a couple more rifles that I acquired recently..


Venom tuned and reblued HW35...

vQziQi3.jpg



Air Arms TX200HC..

MfDQqPg.jpg



HAGWE




John :)
 

Tomcoles

Settler
Jul 21, 2013
537
0
Buckinghamshire
First thing would be, what do you want to use it for?

I'll do my best to outline the differences between them and leave it to you decide which one you want. all comparisons are 'pound for pound', i.e. all things being equal other than calibre.

.177 has a flatter trajectory as it's a smaller, lighter pellet and travels much faster than .22. This makes it more forgiving from a marksmanship point of view as range estimation isn't as critical. This is due to less holdover/ holdunder being required when aiming at different ranges, if you're a few yards out with your range estimation it won't make too much difference. As it travels faster it'll get to it's target quicker too.
A smaller faster projectile will pass through and soft target (animal) easier, when this happens it means it's not delivering all of it's force into the target.

.22 is basically the opposite of the above. .22 rarely passes through an animal giving rise to the phrase "more stopping power", but the truth is either are fine for hunting as if you put the pellet in the right place it'll make the kill. it's true a .22 "hits harder" but you have to be on top of your marksmanship to be as accurate as a .177, especially when shooting spring piston rifles.

.177 pellets are cheaper.

for target shooting most people use .177 for the flatter trajectory and smaller pellet holes (meaning you can fit more individual holes in a target card). For hunting there is much debate!! but as I said either does fine and I hunt with both with success.

hope this helps.

Jim

My 22 pcp goes straight through any animal I shoot. And it's legal. I can make it have the stopping power as described by changing pellet profile.


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Jonbodthethird

Settler
Sep 5, 2013
548
0
Kettering/Stilton
Ok. Honestly the only difference between them both really is the pellet curve on a .22 it's a massively steeper angle where as the .177 is a much lower. I have both and to be honest I prefer my s300 .177 even though my weihrauch hw97k mk1 is tuned to the nuts I can hit targets at 90-100 yards with both but it feels so much easier with the s300. And not because of the recoil because I can put pellet through pellet on my 97 in the ft circuit. Just because of pure pellet drop. If your thinking of hunting I would go down the .177 route.


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Jonbodthethird

Settler
Sep 5, 2013
548
0
Kettering/Stilton
Anyone who claims a .177 doesn't cut the mustard tbh hasn't got a clue. A .177 will cause just as much devastation through velocity as much as a .22 with momentum and size.
Except its a damn site easier to get that .177 there at longer ranges and I've also noticed the .177 seems to be less effected by windage.

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Jonbodthethird

Settler
Sep 5, 2013
548
0
Kettering/Stilton
ytebezyn.jpg


Love them both and couldn't part with either of them. Although I've got my eye on the hw100 this month. Fired one at the gun club and it's just completely awesome!


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CLEM

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jul 10, 2004
2,433
439
Stourbridge
Keep the range sensible and any of the calibres do the job just as effectively as each other that's my experience any way. That said. I've three .177's and only one .22 now! I shoot far more tin chickens these days than. I do hunt!
 

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