



Wapiti wrote:Hey can anyone recommend a reasonably priced, accurate .177 air rifle, for small pest birds in sheds that s**t all over your equipment, that won't shoot through modern corrugated roofing/custom orb?
There isn't a rimfire round that won't punch through any of that stuff. 22 Ratshot will work, but it's expensive and VERY marginal in performance.


Wapiti wrote:Yeah I finally got onto a few boxes of that old Winchester ratshot, the stuff in the 50rd loose boxes. It's hit and miss, usually involves some neck twisting which isn't what I'm about.
I've tried to get dealers out this way to pressure the importers to bring in that Fiocchi 12g no.12 shot loads, that'd sweep the roof purlins clean. But they won't. All they're interested in is clay shooters, and buckshot.
Thanks for your suggestion, I'll do some searching about the Umarex. I'd prefer an old-style air cocker though.


Wapiti wrote:Yeah I tried to get #12 shot and would've even got maybe, a Lee Loader for 12ga just to do that, but couldn't find that size shot listed anywhere.
Every supplier I tried thought I was nuts.
The last thing I want to do is reload for shotguns. I have absolutely no interest in that, and find shotguns quite a compromise for what we do and hardly use them except with buckshot. Hence the air rifle idea.
7.5 and even 9 shot, will blow straight through shed cladding, at say 20m. The factory loadings I've tried anyway, on the test pieces of custom orb I've tested on. But 12 shot is too light and hasn't enough energy, to do that. According to my (barely) professional attempts at calculations. If I had 12-shot cartridges, I could wipe out a whole row of the bloody crapping birds with one shot, by sweeping along a purlin on an angle. The purlins are 7m high in the hay sheds.


Wapiti wrote:Yeah but how to open up a crimp on an unfired cartridge? To tip out the large shot?
Wax is not a very good idea for what I'm trying to do, it will make the shot into a large projectile and will absolutely hole the sheeting.
I've seen a few YouTube videos where blokes have cut off the crimps off cheap 7.5 shot cartridges and poured wax on top of the shot. It stops it falling out, sure, but the result on a target is a big slug of shot in one ball. To me, that's obviously counter to what I described I'm trying to achieve.
No. 12 Ratshot in 22LR at 7m will absolutely kill pest birds if hit in the body or head, the issue is the tiny amount of shot, spreading all over the place after bouncing through the riflling in the rimfire barrel means the shot pattern has huge holes in it so marginal kill rates meaning wounded animals flapping around in purlins 7m up. I don't stand for that..
7/8ths ounce of 12 in a 12g will absolutely fix that, even in an open choke. Nobody has tried it so everything is just opinions right now hey?
Apologies to people who've been annoyed by "thread creep". I realise I should've started two others, one about a good accurate springer pest sluggy and one about 12 shot.

Wapiti wrote:Hey can anyone recommend a reasonably priced, accurate .177 air rifle, for small pest birds in sheds that s**t all over your equipment, that won't shoot through modern corrugated roofing/custom orb?
There isn't a rimfire round that won't punch through any of that stuff. 22 Ratshot will work, but it's expensive and VERY marginal in performance.



alexjones wrote:Would a 22 short go through the shed roof?
I have a henry pump that uses LR and shorts but I never use the shorts.

alexjones wrote:Would a 22 short go through the shed roof?
I have a henry pump that uses LR and shorts but I never use the shorts.

Wapiti wrote:alexjones wrote:Would a 22 short go through the shed roof?
I have a henry pump that uses LR and shorts but I never use the shorts.
Yeah mate, shorts go through at 10m or so, as do Z's, CCI Quiets, all of them. Even the light slow 29gn stuff .
And no importer in Aus will bring in a 12g No.12 shot load, mate they'd sell BUCKETloads to farmers if they did. That light shot is exactly the answer. Alas. I have asked but can't make it happen.


Wapiti wrote:Yeah but mate, you're into more lead bullets more than the rocks in my tyres and boot treads. Your exposure with all the shooting you do is on a mega scale to me.
And yeah, i get my lead levels tested 3x a year, I get FULL bloods done by the Mrs... sometimes 4X a year, and mine are lower than average.
In my left foot, what's left of it, are about 40 lead fragments and that doesn't raise my blood levels at all. Apparently the body surrounds the lead and encapsulates it when embedded. Different in the lungs though.
I will take you to task with a few 1000 tiny pellets lying in all the high shed purlins out here, lead oxidises and when just sitting there, doesn't throw any dust around, ever, if not handled and absorbed, either through skin or airborne from the shot itself, or the priming compound in older ammo.
A bloke downwind of another clay stand, or the smoky lead pistol bullets at the Sunday shoot-em-up at the club will be in a lead cloud every weekend, but not me.
As your lead levels show...
Bring on the No.12 12G shot !!!!!!!!!!



Wapiti wrote:Thanks Blade and NTSOG for taking the time to comment.
I did buy a case of target shot low-velocity 9's, which take out 5 birds at a time, but I have to stand a range-finder measured 30m away from the shed walls if I don't want them heavily dented. It's the weight of the shot, the size is too heavy still. And standing that far away opens the pattern badly.
I have literally 1000's of birds roosting at night in the 30m hay sheds, literally touching one another on the purlins. Imagine the toxic sh*t they line up in the purlins and on the hay and gear. An air rifle... I just do not have the time to sit there all night for weeks on end.
I can only imagine how effective, at a 30' angle, sweeping along a purlin with one shot of 12g 12-shot would be.
And I have spent quite a few nights on google looking for 12 shot, even committing to reloading shotshells (f**k no) if I could find some but I can't.



Damo300 wrote:G'day mate.
If you're in SE QLD, you're more than welcome to borrow my 177 for a bit.
It's a cheap 80s Chinese shanghai model. Nothing special. Open sight, very accurate, side lever loading.
Doesn't go through coro iron, but it knocks rats, pigeons and mynors no worries.

JDM9691 wrote:I have a FX Dreamline classic in .22 (about $1500), which has 3 power settings, High, Medium and Low. I don't have Chrono, but from reverse engineering the BC and drop values it does about 915 fps in both High and Medium, and 590 fps in low. In High and Medium the 15.9grain exact jumbos will go through a pigeon at 20m and still punch through corrugated iron behind it. In LOW it will still go through the chest area of a pigeon about half the time, and when it does it will leave a slight ding in the wall/roof iron. I do my best to line them up so they have a C section or a truss behind them, which the pellets will not damage.
I did some more testing the other day before going out on a pigeon job.
In HIGH or Medium at 25m the 15.8g Jumbos will go through corrugated iron no problem, or will go through 146 pages of glossy magazines.
In LOW it will put a ding in corrugated iron, but not penetrate, or will go through 114 pages of glossy magazine.
There are usually a couple different thicknesses of roof and wall iron, so that will make a difference depending on what you are working with.
I might try some Hades pellets or something with a hollow point next, to try and avoid the pellet going straight through. It's pretty easy to change barrels on the FX stuff, so it might even be worth switching to .177 for these pigeon/shed jobs.
I've used birdshot/ratshot in an old .22 before I got the PCP, and while it doesn't damage the iron much, it also doesn't damage birds much either! Shooting in my own shed with ratshot, I have noticed small flakes of galv floating down from the roof, if the sun is at the right angle, so ratshot isn't exactly damage free for galv iron.
My dad used to empty the BB's from the 12gauge an fill them with wheat, and use that on birds inside sheds. I can't remember the results he had with it, but I'd imagine it would knock them down and stun quite a few even if it didn't kill them. I guess everything is deadly to birds to a certain range, and safe on corrugated iron beyond a certain range - you just have to find out where those ranges are with experience! . I'd imagine the buyer of the hay wouldn't be happy if they knew there were lead pellets in their stock feed

Wapiti wrote:
I'm going to have to get a low-powered, yet accurate, air rifle. Asking at the local gunshops doesn't give me any good info at all.
Most if not all people are chasing air rifles that are as powerful as possible, and nobody can tell me anything to help people with opposite needs.

Wapiti wrote:...was quite accurate with the old Diabolo and Wasp pellets we could buy at the hardware shop.

Flyonline wrote:I've never understood the thinking that .177 will be less penetrative than .22 - think of a needle, the pointy end goes in further/easier than the back end!! My experience has been that I very rarely fail to get a pass through with .177, but often/usually with the .22 at similar FPE (though this is mostly on rabbits, less so on birds). Some time ago I shot various .177 pellets into a consistent matrix of a yogurt container with wet sand and didn't really see a huge difference in expansion on all the pellets. The 'hunting' version (crow magnums) did expand the best at 117% but were pretty inconsistent and rubbish beyond 15-20m, and the slugs I did try were ok also (Zan 10gr) but had a massive drop at distance compared to the Barracuda 8's that shot the best in my rifle. Most of the diablo style pellets were in the 105ish% expansion, so there's not a lot of energy dumped!


