From Ky, Hello everybody
I've been reading this forum since I was informed of the M-rod. My interest is in the .25 cal. I have been a avid air gunner for years but never could afford the euro guns. I do own a .20 cal Career 707. It was mainly used to shoot ft matches for fun. It has been employed as a pest dispatcher and experimental platform. It really is a nice shooter once you train to the trigger and learn to deal the the horrible stock config. Besides that i can shoot a 1.25 inch group @ 100 yds using 14.3 gr crosman premiers. This rifle really got me thinking about how to get the most out of air power and the Mrod seems to be a perfect test plat form.
Ive had a couple of sons since those days and they are getting to the age to start learning to shoot really well instead of pow, pow ,pow, look dad holes. Iv had a big gap in shooting. This forum has put me back in touch with a skill that I have missed for too long and i bringing a couple of real newbs with me. I must say thank you to every one who has asked a question and/or had an answer. This is what thinking is all about. What i would like to bring to the table is a strong understanding of mechanics, light computational understanding of fluid flow of compressible media (air). moderate engineering knowledge and cad capable. I'm a 13yr old Tool maker by trade (got late start 8 yrs Army). for the past 2.5yrs i have been developing a tool to profile fluid dynamics of an air gun. Imagine if you new quantitatively how much volume and psi is required to propel a known pellet at a desired velocity. I believe i can do just that. My program is cumbersome, but my brother is helping me with a gui. He's the computer programmer. long and short is a 16 shot string requires approx 40000 math calculations. yea, 2.5 yrs of math in my spare time, that's sick I know. lots learned and i now have a beta to test against known platforms and tunes to prove out. Looking forward to discussions and discovery. The biggest lesson I've learned is i need to learn more.