.223 Condor
I am thinking of ordering a .223 barrel blank with a 1 in 9″ or even 1 in 8″ twist rate to be machined to fit my Condor. I know that the 80 FPE Daystate Air Ranger is barreled to shoot .224 bullets but I do not know what twist rate they have it set up with.
Assuming that with a 90 gr. hammer with my stock Condor valve should send a 30 grain Barnes Varmint Grenade made for the .22 hornet out around 1,050 fps. My quicky calcs say that with a 1 in 8″ barrel that bullet should be spinning at 94,500 rpm (MV x (12/by twist rate in inches) x 60 = Bullet RPM), which is about 37% the rpm the bullet would have being shot out of a .223 at 2,800 fps, but I am only concerned with it’s stabilization out to around 100 yds.
This would be making 73.4 FPE at the muzzle (in .22 no less!) and due to the bullets superior BC of .149 (compared to that of a .22 Kodiak at .0360) it would still be carrying 64 FPE at 100 Yards and 59 FPE at 150. (87% of it’s initial muzzle energy!!!) To show how impressive that is, a .25 Condor shooting a 30.7 grain Kodiak at the same FPS makes 75.1 FPE at the muzzle, but only retains about 37 FPE at 100 yards and that is the whole point of what I am looking for in this -retained energy out to 100 yds.
Chairgun2 also shows that with a 50 yd. zero, this setup would be within a 1″ vertical plane of zero from 27 to 63 yards and then about
-2″@80yds.,
-3.5″@90yds.
-5.2″@100yds.
My big concerns in this are as follows:
1. is 94,500 rpm enough to stabilize a spitzer bullet, even at only 30 grs.?
2. Loss of FPS due to 1in8″/ 1in9″ twist rate? (24″ AF barrel is 1in16″)
3. Loss of FPS due to imprinting a FMJ copper bullet at low velocity.
4. Bullet expansion at low velocity.
I have picked the Barnes Varmit Grenade due to it’s design being a “closed” hollow-point. It basically has a void behind it’s closed copper tip and I would think that at over 1,000 FPS it would provide reasonable expansion being that at 2,800 FPS it virtually explodes inside the quarry and rarely leaves an exit hole (at least in coyotes). I also like the fact that there are probably around 30-40 different .224 cal. bullets to experiment with though I am sure the heavier bullets would be even farther away from being stabile at the RPM I am figuring this would provide.
On paper it looks incredible, which in my experience quickly turns into “impossible”. I know that the bullet RPM is the Achille’s heal of the whole thing.
Any input from those with first hand experience of shooting rifle bullets (not black powder slugs) at airgun velocities would be much appreciated.
All Replies
Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.



Sabot: Have you thought about the 30gr Eley slugs? They are pretty much .22LR bullets. They will also give you a pretty good idea of how fast the 30gr projectiles you are considering will travel out of the muzzle. I use the Eleys and they are pretty accurate to 50yds. Have not tried any longer ranges. I don’t know what the BC is on the Eleys but it could be much better than the Kodiaks. They expand much better than the latter too.
The .25’s will definitely raise your POI by several inches @ 100yds and retain more energy. I got 2 .25 Condors now and love them but will keep my .22 for a while because I like how it shoots the 30gr Eleys.