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I've made some tests with different BBs at different fps-s.Has anyone actually done any controlled testing of different weights? a gun in a bench rest and several hundred rounds of each weight shot at a target at various rages?
Welcome to the forumsHere we have FPS limits of 400 for AEGs, 500 for semi-auto only AEGs (20m MED), 600 for bolt-action snipers (20m MED).
That surprises me because, in my own experience, the difference between 345FPS and 365FPS is about 15m effective range and the difference between 365FPS and 425FPS is well over 30m.Most veteran players downgrade their guns to about 350fps even though we could go for 400. As we say, if you can't solve a problem with 350 then you can't solve it with 400 either. There is only minimal difference in the effective range with those velocities.
As far as I understand it, the reason for the difference in restrictions is because BB's fired full-auto leave the muzzle so close together that they can arrive on target literally one behind the other, so the energy they carry could be delivered to exactly the same spot on the target individual, or their eye protection (in completely still air conditions and only when the target person is jammed into a position so they cannot move, ie impossible but necessary to imagine for insurance purposes). I have not heard of a semi-auto restriction of 1BB in the air at a time, but it doesn't sound unreasonable at 500FPS. Nevertheless, even at the extreme when, say, 6 semi-auto BB's are in the air at the same time, nobody could get a grouping at 20+m in which hits overlapped enough to be a concern.*The 500 fps dmrs have semi only (1 BB in air at a time) and 20m MED. These two limitations are much worse than what you gain in range so veterans playing the DM role usually downgrade below 400. If you are able to shoot 2-3 BB-s with semi auto to a target before the first reaches it, you usually get more hits than with one 500 fps shot.
That is not my experience.Finally the snipers with 600fps. Experience says that anything above 500fps only shortens the BB's travel time. It doesn't change the accuracy or the range at all.
That is completely opposite to my experience. I'd be interested to know how you came to that conclusion?Actually higher fps tends to be a bit less accurate but that's only marginal.
I'm not sure I really understand all of this bit. I mean, I think everybody knows that heavier BB's travel more slowly but have equal or greater range, so long as the hop will lift them. The issue is what effects any increase in muzzle energy have, if they are significant and, if so, are they desirable in our sport/hobby?I've made some tests with different BBs at different fps-s.
The result is: use the heaviest BB your gun can handle (the hopup can spin it). BB quality and weight matters the most to accuracy.
In the test I fixed the guns on a workbench table, and used a target on 40m, no wind. I made a lot of shots, counted the hits and misses and averaged the results. Both 350 and 400 fps were tested but on 40m there is no real difference.
This is the brand of BB's I use (sorry, only available here) that I found to be the best.
Weight: hits
0.20: 76%
0.20 Bio: 80%
0.23: 87%
0.25 Bio: 100%
0.28 Bio: 100%
As you see with this test setup I couldn't measure the difference between 0.25 and 0.28 but 0.28 IS more accurate. I should have a bigger yard.![]()
Bio BBs are more accurate due to how they are made, there is no bubble in them so they spin evenly.
Other band. No bio. I was using this one before I swithced to the above one.
0.23: 65% (I think this batch was faulty, it should have been higher. Maybe 75-80%)
0.25: 90%
0.28: 95%
For my normal AEGs I use 0.28 Bio or 0.30. Hell, I use 0.28 in my 300fps handgun.Never use 0.20 except when chronoing.
People think heavier BBs have shorter range. That is also not true. Heavy BBs retain the kinetic energy better (air resistance doesn't effect them that much) so they actually have the same or slightly better maximum range too. (Check the Airsoft Trajectory Project on this)
I hope this helps a bit.
No lab tests on this, just experience. The snipers here tend to agree on this. Mostly.That is completely opposite to my experience. I'd be interested to know how you came to that conclusion?Actually higher fps tends to be a bit less accurate but that's only marginal.
The only regular BBs I have ever seen or read about that have no bubbles are the SGM 0.29 ones. Madbull 0.40s are quite accurate because the bubble is about in the middle of it. You can use a wire cutter or something similar to cut the BBs and check it.Which brand/s of BB's, BTW? As far as I know there should not be bubbles inside any BB's
When the first bio BBs came around they were really bad. Inaccurate, uneven, and they started degrading if they came to contact with humidity of the air. If you left the bottle open for a few days, they got bigger and soft.Other than that nothing really strikes me as that surprising, aside from bio BBs being more accurate and better put together.
What injuries?I think 350-400 mark is fine, any higher and injuries would increase...
People keep telling me this, but my experience continues to stubbornly agree with Isaac Newton. I just can't account for it. Take a 6.02x247mm barrel out of my AKS-74U and replace it with a 6.05x230mm and the range drops by a few meters. Must be the hop or some complex gobbledegook way over my head. Strange though because when I took the worn M150 spring out of my SVD and replaced it with an M135 the same thing happened, but this time the effect was much more noticeable - 16-17m and a flatter trajectory gone in one fell swoop. Bummer really, but it had been way hot (535FPS) so I had to do it (495FPS). Come to think of it, when I 1st bought my G36KV I was a bit disappointed with the range, but I had sort of been expecting it because it had been set up to fire @330FPS. I knew I was going to upgrade the arse out of her, but wouldn't be able to do it all at once. To see what effect my erroneous belief that higher FPS would result in more range produced, I swapped the barrel from 6.08x390(iirc)mm to an AK barrel 6.04x455mm - blow me if it didn't shoot further.Someone did a study and just increasing FPS does very little to the range of the gun.