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These differences are why we calculate foot pounds of energy for comparison
ОтветитьInteresting. Cool hat dude. Good form.
ОтветитьAwesome video my friend but I wish you would have turned the reg up all the way on the 30 caliber to see what it would have got.
ОтветитьPellet Size Matters!🤠☕️
ОтветитьGreat vid. I don't get why everyone turns their guns down, turn it up, find the pellet or slug that shoots well at max velocity (for hunting)
I get turning them down for less air consumption
yeah, turn the .30 up and let see the power and the shoot count. Cheers master thanks for your work.
ОтветитьGood data you are gathering there. It would be awesome if you could make a Part 2 the test on 2 fresh hams or pig rib cage with meat still on them to see what works best for hard targets like bone. Love your videos man
ОтветитьBrother, you need to check out that new Taipan Slash also..looks very promising.
ОтветитьWhere are you getting this 2¼ measurement from? The tape clearly says 2¾" minimum from the .30, and 3" from the .22
Ответить22 is much smaller surface so its so obvious that will further penetrate deeper in order for 30 cal to get that same distance when it hit it will require minimum 50% more energy than 22 cal since 30 cal does have 50 % more surface area than 22 cal so that 22 cal you shot was about 67FPE then 30 cal will need 100FPE then i will be interesting result
ОтветитьBro, you have one of the best Airgun channels! Very informative and entertaining. Cheers!
Ответить👍
ОтветитьA steel plate at 50 yards with my 22 that's around the same foot pounds as my 9 mm HP Max and it smacks the plate way harder than the 22
Ответитьwhat is the jets size sum you have in the plenum?
ОтветитьI have a leshy 2 .25 450mm barrel and i just cant make it work on slugs any suggestions or advice on how to properly tune it.. i tried a whole variety of slugs and velocity but i just cant make it to shoot decent grouping
ОтветитьNice video, but not the test you thought you had. You were actually measuring the potential energy of compressed air in your max reg (1 or 2?) level. The small difference in ft/lbs for the two slugs reflects that fact. If you had both leaving at the same muzzle velocity, you would have a comparison of light weight/small diameter vs heavier weight/larger diameter projectiles. Muzzle energy = 1/2 mass X velocity squared. You had both mass AND velocity (and diameter) different. "Knockdown power" (often "heard" in impact noise difference) as opposed to destructive energy is called momentum which is simply mass times velocity. In International Silhouette Handgun Association, heavier bullets going slower in a given caliber often could slam the steel targets down while very fast light bullets sometimes lost some much energy through the splattering on the heavy armor plate that insufficient momentum transfer would leave the target standing. Interesting stuff, regardless. Keep at it.
ОтветитьWhat were the barrel lengths of each caliber?
ОтветитьNot a legitimate comparison. You did not demonstrate consistent density in your clay blocks.
ОтветитьAssuming you get more shots out of the 22, it travels faster and thus more flat trajectory (not sure what the distance was in this test) and impact seems comparable to the 30, my money is on the 22. Do wonder, would the 25 be best of both worlds?
ОтветитьGreat video. Max power!
Love it