I've not vise tested my K12. Did with a few pellets through my K10 and found it ridiculously accurate, and my sense is that the K12 puts them exactly where I'm pointing when the trigger pops, so there seems little point. Not surprised at the small JSB SCHaK group. They're nice pellets. Just on my last tin from a sleeve and I'll be ordering more, though I have a sleeve of H&N Finale Match to get through first.
Just found out that the jsb schak is the same as jsb match. The only difference is the qualitycontrol. My pellets of schak was also the same weight as the match middle weight. No wonder the groups looked the same :)
MorganKane2014 wrote:Just found out that the jsb schak is the same as jsb match. The only difference is the qualitycontrol. My pellets of schak was also the same weight as the match middle weight. No wonder the groups looked the same :)
That's what my pellet dealer, Harvey Lavigne told me when I bought the SCHaK, saying they were the same pellet effectively but at a lower price. This other group from JiriK showing a similarly tight group with the RWS Diabolo Basic is also unsurprising. I tested those with the K10 and achieved similar groups. I'd use them regularly, only it seems they are hard to find in my area. Besides that they are a bit dirty in handling compared to the SCHaK and leave my K12's breech seal somewhat fouled, though not nearly so dirty as the RWS Hobby. I believe Rover has had similarly good test results with the Basics.
The JSB Green label comes in two different weights; .475 and .500 gram.
Just trying to make it hard on us, I guess. I had extraordinary success with the lighter pellets. They were unbeatable, but all the other JSBs were excellent.
Very interesting!
For the sake of veracity, I'd re-run the test and compare the results. Repeatability is an important component of experimental process.
It seems to me that the groups (JSB 7.72 and Walther 4.5) are only diverging in the vertical direction more than they should. This indicates that you probably have to be more careful when you cock the gun from shot to shot or clamp it better.
I've had similar test groups when I tested my LP10 and got exactly that vertical spread when the pistol has not clamped properly or I'd cock it to hard. When a pellet group opens up it normally does in all directions, not just vertically. When I retested those pellets with more care, I got groups much tighter.
I would repeat those groups (JSB 7.72 and Walther 4.5) with extra care just to be sure. And if you can, test the exit speed to see how consistent it is.
It seems to me that the groups (JSB 7.72 and Walther 4.5) are only diverging in the vertical direction more than they should. This indicates that you probably have to be more careful when you cock the gun from shot to shot or clamp it better.
I've had similar test groups when I tested my LP10 and got exactly that vertical spread when the pistol has not clamped properly or I'd cock it to hard. When a pellet group opens up it normally does in all directions, not just vertically. When I retested those pellets with more care, I got groups much tighter.
I would repeat those groups (JSB 7.72 and Walther 4.5) with extra care just to be sure. And if you can, test the exit speed to see how consistent it is.
Hope this helps
I see your point, i might have done the cocking of the gun a little different each time.
All groups were shot the same day, in rapid succession.
The tre groups on the top right were the first fired, and then bottom line from the left to the right.
The pistol stayed in the same place during the hole session.
I will try to find the time to do another test, and maybe with more shots of each pellet.