CRSSAteammember wrote:I am also going to nationals in air rifle we are using the daisy xs40 valiants. The 888s cannot be aimed high enough can but will not be accurate we are taking seperate rifles for the 3 p and standing day than silhouttes. The t200 and xs40 have more than enough to hit them. We arre sending rams flying. Good luck and hope to see you there what state are you representing?
Dissenting Opinion here.
888/887 are as accurate out past 50 yds as the XSV-40/T200's. Many times this is a selection of pellets (mfgr lot or maybe even diameter ... many of our 888/887's really seem to like 4.49 pellets ... talk to our host here)
Velocity ... these should be approx the same ... if the T200's are a lot faster than the 888/887's then they have been cranked up and may be outside the scope of the 3-P and Standing event velocity limit (600fps).
A 350 fps pellet will easily knock off a RAM at 45yds.
Yes, you may shoot a gun that has a faster velocity in
Silhouette, but:
1) If it's over 600fps it's an illegal gun in the 3-P and Standing events, so you would need 2 guns ... one (under 600fps) for the 3-P and Standing events and another (>600fps) for the silhouette
--and--
2) If you damage a silhouette target (most likely a chicken) you will be disqualified ... the so called "1000fps" break rifles will indeed damage the chickens firing regular pellets. If you shoot the very light pellets (are there any that are flat or domed (hunting tipped are illegal)) there may not be damage ... have not played with those.
Motive Force: (Air versus CO2)
The next 2 years the event in Nebraska will be shot indoors to my knowledge, thus, there is no disadvantage to a CO2 rifle. If it was outdoors, in the sun, then yes, you would have to keep the rifle/cylinder covered when not shooting.
Shimming the scopes.
Yup on <600fps velocity rifles (888/887 specifically) using common 3-9X scopes you'll have to shim the scope in the back rings ... usually 1 or 2 coke can thicknesses of shim under the scope in the back ring.
Me, I prefer to teach my shooters a hold over/under technique with the same sights (aperture) on the rifle rifle sighted in standing at 10m. This is done the day before at 4-H Nationals as they fire the Standing event the previous day. Practice on paper 80% of the time so they can see exactly where they are hitting ... especially at the event during training the day before ... altitude does make a difference ... again, wind won't be a factor ... you're indoors