No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroWinchester . 177 Round Nosed Lead Air Gun Pellets retain their velocity at longer ranges and deliver outstanding penetration for hunting and pest control. With a rounded head design that gives them su
mairi gillingham
Comentado en Canadá el 8 de febrero de 2025
Arrived quickly
Hollis
Comentado en Canadá el 5 de enero de 2025
Great hectic to these. Feel nice not powdery or to much residue like some pellets. Shoot consistently, hit hard n straight. Loving these in my Colt revolver and my single shot break barrel
Customer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 27 de septiembre de 2024
I ordered the 177 domed pellets along with 500 of my regular JSB match Diablo pellets. For less than half the price of the Diablos I wasn't expecting much quality wise but so far I love the results. I shoot saw blades from 22 to 100 yards with crossman pistols, an HW77 and a Umarex 10-22 clone and I see no loss off accuracy or consistency in any of my guns. I haven't compared group size on paper as its irrelevent because of my success hitting the targets I regularly shoot.For my shooting I see no difference in these pellets compared to the Diablos and in the future I'll be saving money and buying the Winchester pellets exclusively.
Customer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 22 de abril de 2024
I shoot these in a scoped (CVLifve 9x40) Crosman 760 and Daisy 901, both at six pumps from 15 yards, and consistently get 1/4" to 1/2" repeatable groupings with both rifles. I've shot around 1000 total rounds (500 each gun) and am very happy with the performance. For the price, this is a great every day plinker target pellet. I've also knocked down a few squirrels raiding my bird feeders from 10 yards (at the feeder) and 25 yards (in the trees). Not all pellets work great in all guns, but I'm very happy with these and highly recommend grabbing a tin or two and see how they perform for you.
Bubba Pearson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 17 de julio de 2021
These perform very well in my Daisy 880 and Winchester 1977XS, especially at 10 pumps. Sure, they look and feel pretty cheap, but that's probably appropriate as they actually were pretty cheap. I paid only $7.31 for 500 at the end of June 2021, which is an EXCELLENT price for a jumbo tin as far as I'm concerned. For a cheap pellet, they've performed very well, and most of the times I've missed the mark, it's been close enough I attribute the miss to me rather than the rifle or pellet. Also, if these perform well for you, don't hesitate to try out the Winchester Hollow Point pellets in .177 too, which are probably the same pellet with a hollow point, along the lines of the Crosman Premier Domed and Hollow Point pellets. For an inexpensive pellet, I've had very good luck with these .177 Winchester pellets and quite like both. If they still cost the same as they did when I placed my June order, I'd almost certainly be ordering more, but in just a couple of weeks they've almost doubled in price! That's too bad, because I won't buy another 500 for the current (July 17th) price of more than $13.00. I like these quite a bit, but unless the price goes back down, I can't give them the recommendation I think they're close to deserving.Update October/September/August 2021: I discovered these also give me a pretty good bang for the buck in my more pellet-picky Crosman 1077W and .177 Umarex Strike Point pistol, although the latter seems to shoot almost any type of pellet as accurately as any other (the one airgun I have in both .177 and .22 calibers). I also seem to have the best luck avoiding jams in my 1077W when I don't use pointed pellets, so these were a very welcome and low-cost addition to the match-type pellets I'd been using almost exclusively.When it comes right down to it, it seems like the more I use these Winchester pellets the more I like them, although my very favorite, go-to .177 pellets by late August pretty solidly seem to be centered on Crosman Premier Domed and Hollow Point pellets and the equally excellent H&N Excite Plinking (flat-head) and Hammer (domed) pellets (in .177 and .22 calibers). I still tend to think about snagging another tin of the Winchester pellets when I notice prices are down though, unless I've been shooting .22 caliber air rifles and pistols almost exclusively for awhile, which seems to be happening more and more often as time goes by. I think it could be nothing more than it's just easier for my aging peepers to see the bigger yellow splat-marks surrounding the black hole at the center of the hits on Shoot-N-C self-adhesive targets when I shoot .22 instead of .177! :-) Seriously, it's quite a difference. ;-) Also, while I still love the .177 airguns in my collection, for the most part they're just not quite as nice as those I have in .22 caliber, and I'm not really interested in having the .177 version of the same airgun I bought in .22 caliber (excepting my Strike Points), so most of the .177 airguns in my collection are my older, more entry-level models, while the .22s tend to be newer, higher quality, higher priced and more hard hitting. It seems I rarely get Daisy out of the rifle rack now when I can grab the Benjamin 392s instead. I tend to leave even my beautiful 1077W in place when I can go with my new Umarex 850 M2 Magnum (although that 12-shot, rapid-fire capability still can be about a BOATLOAD more fun than the 7-round Umarex, on which I also have to cycle the bolt for every shot). Okay, okay... back to the subject.Once I started paying attention, I found the price fluctuates pretty wildly here on Amazon.com and these and the Hollow Points are sold at many other websites specializing in airguns and accessories too, so keep checking prices here, but shop around too. I've found these for as little as ~$6.50/tin and as high as twice that, so it pays to keep eyes open. Also, when these seem to be getting a bit pricey, I check out the price of the Winchester Hollow Point pellets and vice versa. I've discovered one type often can be right up there, when the other is selling for between six and seven dollars, a great price for 500 pellets! Furthermore, since both tend to give me about the same level of performance, they're pretty much interchangeable for my needs. As an inexpensive pellet for plinking and fooling around with my .177 airguns, they perform quite well and I usually can afford to keep them on-hand. I'm not 100% sure, but I tend to think these might be the same pellets as the look-alikes sold under the Daisy label, and those typically can be found at even lower prices almost everywhere (but don't hold me to that). At any rate, if you're into .177 and these pellets work for you, stock up when the price is low, or check price and availability at as many other sites as you can for an even better price.Now, almost any time I can get a tin of the best performing pellets in my airguns for less than two cents each (especially .22 pellets!), I stock up. For example, when the Gamo combo pack of different .177 pellets was selling here a couple of months ago for $14.99 per 1000 (a tin of 250 each of 4 different types), I bought one Combo pack to try them out and when I discovered every type worked very well in one or more of my .177 airguns, I bought another four packs for a total of four thousand (half of which are already about gone). I'm also enjoying the inexpensive .177 and .22 H&N Excite Plinking and Hammer pellets that work very well, especially in my .22 airguns, so when I found them for $5.99/250 at Pyramyd Air, I got twelve tins using their buy 3, 1 free deal and only paid for nine, just a smidgeon more than 1 penny per pellet! Hey, some of the Crosman Premier pellets (more strong favorites) are almost that cheap, so I bought more of those too. After all, if you're going to be shooting, you're going to save money by buying pellets in quantity when the prices are low -- always. You get the idea. Give it a shot. :-) Good luck and happy hunting and plinking!
Productos recomendados