Ok, ok. I’ll be the first to call Bulllll Sheet on that one! Lol. No way that’s true. I think you’re an inch too deep into the Sunday night story-telling liquid. Pics or it didn’t happen and all that Jazz.
I've been charged with ridding an outdoor chicken coop of a rat infestation.
I was handed a Crosman Phantom .177 495 fps break open air rifle and some pointed pellets, so far I've managed hit 25 of the buggers, but they've all run off, even one that I managed to solidly hit twice.
Is this to be expected with a low powered airgun and pointed pellets?
My recent experience in putting down a couple of rats that I found caught in traps that were still alive, is that they can take an unbelievable amount of damage. I'd go for headshots only, but can hardly guarantee them with this rifle, which seems difficult to shoot well compared to any other airgun I've used.
I have seen videos on YouTube about attaching a specific type of video camera to a scoped rifle and then you can use it at night time when they all come out and think they are safe. Some kind of hacked night vision that seems to be very effective.
I've been charged with ridding an outdoor chicken coop of a rat infestation.
I was handed a Crosman Phantom .177 495 fps break open air rifle and some pointed pellets, so far I've managed hit 25 of the buggers, but they've all run off, even one that I managed to solidly hit twice.
Is this to be expected with a low powered airgun and pointed pellets?
My recent experience in putting down a couple of rats that I found caught in traps that were still alive, is that they can take an unbelievable amount of damage. I'd go for headshots only, but can hardly guarantee them with this rifle, which seems difficult to shoot well compared to any other airgun I've used.
Unfortunately I think ferrets would kill the chickens, although its worth keeping in mind for when I have to clear out a rat problem at a real farm in another location.
Its been my experience that hunting rats is real sport
Night vision is commonly used in the UK, at least on video, but has been priced off the market here if you can even find it.
I shot a plague of house chewing black and grey squirrels for a friend a while back, critters with about the same body mass as a rat, and even using a borrowed hypervelocity .22 cal air rifle, quick kill shots were rare. Most of them ran off a considerable distance and I later found a number of them dead under the tree of their choice. But one solution to the problem in the OP is to get a .22 air rifle with a velocity that requires a PAL, if you have a PAL. A .177 is a bit light for rats I think.
Try lead BB size solid lead shot. The extra weight will go right through rats, rabbits and Squirrels.
Not BS at all. Rats & such can't burp worth a fook, so hit 'em with a snack that gasifies in acid and voila.
https://www.facebook.com/FerndaleRa...ere-it-is-the-recipe-below-/1611022505793081/
Great little unit fer sure, but it takes all the fun and shootin' practice out of the equation for many folks.
Best method I use be little dabs of peanut butter with bits of Alka Seltzer tablets mixed in. Rat's don't handle the gas pressure generated by the reaction with stomach acid worth a fook.
The popping sound of rats blowing out at night sure makes for giggles though.
I still use my old TEX 086 pistol though for rat sized critters out to 20 yds or so using RWS 8.2 gr Superpoint 177's. These pellets shoot fine from my HW 45 as well.
Victor rat traps and peanut butter.
Victor rat traps and peanut butter.