Persistence paid off..... eventually !
This rifle had the potential to become a real love-hate relationship. If I'm honest, it initially leaned far more towards the hate than the love. These airguns are highly technical and incredibly sensitive to even the smallest adjustments, but once you find the sweet spot, everything starts to come together.
For me, that sweet spot—or at least the early signs of it—was sending 35-grain slugs downrange at 1,005 fps, producing close to 80 ft-lb of muzzle energy.
After a quick zeroing session and uploading the ballistic data into the Alpex, it was time to stretch its legs. Consistently ringing the steel plate at 165 yards, shot after shot, was seriously impressive—especially for an airgun.
It didn't take long to realise where this rifle really excelled. As a ratting tool, it came into its own, allowing me to sit well back from the action without disturbing these notoriously wary pests. They had every reason to be nervous—although, as it turned out, not quite nervous enough.
Place a 35-grain slug accurately into the front quarter of a rat, and it simply isn't going anywhere. This particular rifle is chambered in .25 calibre. On paper, a quarter of an inch may not sound like much, but when you see the size of the projectile and the energy it's carrying, the effect on target is undeniable.
I'm looking forward to spending more time with this rifle and continuing to explore what it's truly capable of. I have a feeling it still has plenty to surprise me with. What continues to amaze me most, though, is the fact that it's "just" an airgun. I can't help comparing it to the air rifles many of us started with—plinking tin cans at 30 yards. Fast forward to today, and I'm confidently engaging much smaller targets at over five times that distance. The progression of modern airguns has been nothing short of remarkable.