Who needs a chronograph?
A look at the Shooting Chrony
by Tom Gaylord
exclusively for PyramydAir.com. © Copyright 2006 All Rights
Reserved

The red Alpha Chrony on
the right has the skyscreen diffusers mounted. The blue Beta Chrony
does not. The instrument can be used with or without the diffusers,
which are for bright sunny days.

All Chronys will mount on a camera tripod. This is the easiest
way to carry them to the field.
As it turns out - YOU probably
need a chronograph more than you know! Airgunners own more chronographs
than any other group in the shooting sports. We own them because
we can use them much more often. Who can go down to the basement
and shoot a few .300 Win Mag rounds while supper's heating? You
can shoot rimfire indoors, but it helps if you're not married.
But, a string of 20 shots from
a quiet FX Black Widow or Talon SS isn't going to bother anyone, especially
if the SS is dialed way down. Or, better yet, if it has the new
AirForce Micro-Meter tank attached, nobody upstairs
will even know you're shooting anything!
What IS
a chronograph?
There are several definitions for the word chronograph, but the
kind we are looking at measures the speed of projectiles in flight.
Whether they are bullets, arrows, pellets, BBs or rocks shot from
a slingshot - as long as they pass through the chronograph sensors,
their velocity will be calculated.
What IS
a Shooting Chrony?
Shooting Chrony is a brand of chronograph that offers a lot of
performance for very little money. It's perfect for the average
shooter who wants to know more about his guns. And, the Chrony
brand can grow in capability when you're ready for it. We are
looking at the Alpha model Chrony that's the most popular among
airgunners. It has all the features you need to get started, but
it doesn't waste a dime of your money. It records a string of
up to 32 shots. It performs the basic statistical analysis shooters
need, such as:
Average velocity
Fastest
shot
Slowest shot
Standard deviation
When the Alpha is turned off,
all saved data is erased. If you need a machine with a memory,
get the Beta model Chrony, which can remember up to 60
shots even when turned off.

Looking straight down on
the first skyscreen, we see a slot at the bottom of the picture.
The light sensor is beneath a clear plastic cover. Notice how
simple the inside of this Alpha Chrony looks!
The Chrony is powered by a 9-volt
alkaline battery. It is very important to use an alkaline battery,
because the sensitive electronics inside the chronograph need
the controlled power output of this type of battery. The Chrony
is housed in an aluminum box that folds up for transport. You
can leave the battery installed, because the unit has a power
switch.
What NOT
to do with a chronograph!
Some shooters get a chronograph and start chrongraphing all their
airguns immediately. People who were once happy shooters now stare
at the chronograph screen trying to decide how they should feel
about the numbers. A chronograph is to airgunners what a fish
scale is to fishermen, and some folks are better off not knowing!
What TO
DO with a chronograph!
There are LOADS of important things you can do with a chronograph.
Here are just a few.
- If you know how fast your airguns
shoot a certain pellet, you will know when they have lost performance
and need attention.\
- You can check out those inflated
advertising claims made by some manufacturers.
- You can determine the optimum
pressure limits for all your precharged air rifles. For example,
the AirForce Condor is very sensitive to overfilling.
With a chronograph you can determine the exact top fill pressure
your gun will tolerate by filling to 3,000 psi and shooting until
your gun starts performing its best. By refilling at that point,
you will notice the pressure at which the air tank starts accepting
the fill, and that pressure is your maximum fill! Anything higher
just wastes air.
- In conjunction with reason No.
3, you can calibrate the pressure gauges of all your refill devices.
Instead of blindly filling every gun to 3,000 psi, you can discover
the exact pressure reading at which each of your airguns develops
its greatest power. It won't matter whether the gauge is off
by a little bit - you'll know what it should say for the best
results with each airgun.
- You can check the health of
all your multi-pump pneumatics. A chronograph will tell you if
your gun shoots faster or slower with the maximum number of pump
strokes. No sense doing more work for less results! For example,
a Sheridan Blue Streak should develop close to
675 f.p.s. with a 14.3-grain pellet on eight pumps of air - the
maximum. If your gun stops at 550 on 8 pumps, or if it gets 614
with 7 pumps but only 567 with 8 pumps, you know it's time for
some repairs.
- You can perform all those experiments
you've been reading about. Do .22 pellets really develop 20 percent
greater power than .177 in a given airgun? With a Talon SS and a spare barrel in the other caliber,
you'll know for certain in a matter of minutes! Will Gamo Raptors really go supersonic in your Gamo CF-X? Is the Hunter 1250 Hurricane really a 1,600 f.p.s.
air rifle with Raptors? With a chronograph, you'll know the answers
to these and many more important questions.
- A chronograph tells you what
those numbers on the Talon power adjustment wheel really mean!
You will learn where to set the wheel for the best performance
and perhaps save some air with every shot as you do.

What do the numbers on the Talon power adjustment wheel and window
mean? With a chronograph, you can find out!
Are chronographs
difficult to operate?
Today's Chronys are easy
to use. They come with complete instructions, and the video at
the end of this article shows you just how quick and easy it is
to set one up. Every time you shoot through the skyscreens, the
number on the chronograph display changes to reflect the speed
of that shot. It really couldn't be simpler.

The moment you shoot, the
Chrony display indicates the pellet's velocity. Here we see feet-per-second,
but you can easily change that to meters-per-second. The cable
is connected to the optional printer.
What are skyscreens?
The chronograph is a time-recording machine, and it needs something
to start and stop the clock. Skyscreens do that. They are light
sensors that are in line with each other in the red aluminum Chrony
box. Both the start and stop skyscreen point up toward the sky
- hence the name. When a pellet passes overhead, they sense a
decrease in the light caused by the pellet's shadow, and that
triggers them. Screen one starts the clock; screen two stops it.
Because the clock is a crystal oscillator that vibrates at an
extremely uniform rate, the number of oscillations that are collected
between the start and stop screens represents the time it takes
the pellet to travel that distance. Velocity is then calculated
by the onboard computer, and the number is displayed on the LCD
screen.
Does it ALWAYS
work?
There is a region of sensitivity above the skyscreens that the
pellet must pass through to trigger each screen. If it triggers
one screen but not the other, you'll get an error message. The
sensitive region has both height and width and varies in size
with each caliber of pellet. A small pellet casts a smaller shadow,
so the region of sensitivity is smaller.
The instructions that come with
the chronograph tell you that the area of sensitivity is roughly
the shape and size of the trapezoid formed when the skyscreen
diffusers are mounted. Actually, the real area varies with both
lighting and pellet size, but it's always a little smaller than
the area indicated by the wire stands and diffusers. On a bright
day, strong sunlight can reflect off a shiny pellet and cause
problems for the sensors. Always suspect light when your readings
are difficult to get or they are nowhere close to where you expect
them to be. Use the diffusers when the sun is bright or the clouds
are moving about fast.
The muzzle
blast can trigger the start screen
A jet of compressed air or CO2 can trigger the start screen under
the right circumstances. The instructions that come with the chronograph
explain this, so take the time to read and understand them. They
recommend keeping the muzzle of a .22 rimfire 3 feet from the
start screen, so you can get a little closer with an airgun. The
type of powerplant and the power level of the gun you're testing
will determine the actual amount of standoff you need.
Using artificial
light
Artificial light can be used as long as it is constant. Regular
incandescent house lights are fine, but lights that flicker, such
as fluorescents, do not work. They trigger the skyscreens. A mix
of fluorescents and incandescents is also bad; turn those fluorescents
off! There has to be enough light for the skyscreen sensors to
detect a shadow from the passing pellet. Positioning the skyscreens
directly under the light and using the diffusers is often the
best way to use the chronograph indoors.
Other features
The Alpha model I tested records several things besides velocity.
There is the total number of shots per string (up to 32 shots
with the Alpha model), the fastest shot and the slowest shot.
It also calculates several statistics - average velocity, standard
deviation and extreme spread. To access these data, you press
the button labeled FU in the upper left corner of the faceplate
and it steps you through the data. Additionally, these are
international machines and will display velocities in either feet
or meters per second. The instructions tell you how to make
the change.
If your shot doesn't register,
there will usually be an error message telling you what's wrong.
Error 1 means the first skyscreen didn't get a reading. Error
2 means skyscreen 2 didn't get a reading, and so on.

When something goes wrong,
the Chrony gives an error message like this. In this case, the
second skyscreen did not "see" the pellet.
Using the optional
printer
With the Chrony, you buy only what you need and nothing extra.
However, one option most people will want is the ballistic Chrony printer. It provides much more
than just a record of your shooting. For starters, it has a 16-foot
cord, so it also serves as a remote control, so you can position
the chronograph away from your shooting location and still control
it. While the printer has no LCD display, you can read the velocity
directly from the paper tape.

The optional printer connects
to both models. It runs on batteries or house current from the
adapter provided. Besides recording everything that happens, the
printer allows you to be 16 feet from the chronograph.
This unit operates on four AA
batteries but can also run on household AC current through the
supplied adapter. That makes it a perfect accessory for the home
experimenter.
One nice thing about the printer
is that it does the recording automatically. That leaves you free
to shoot the gun. Another plus is the printer cable allows you
16 feet of separation from the Chrony, while still being able
to see the velocities printed out as you shoot. Because the printer
is an option, you can wait to buy it later. The chronograph works
fine without it.
Printer paper
The printer comes with a small roll of paper contained inside
its case, but you will want to use it with a standard printing
calculator paper roll that comes from any office supply store.
A wire axle pops out the top of the printer to hold a standard
2.25" standard printer paper roll. The printer ink roller
is also a standard office supply item.
Loading the paper is tricky at
first, because the instructions are graphic only and not very
clear. The secret is that the advance button only moves the paper
one line at a time, so it takes a while to advance the paper through
the printer. Once you know that, a new paper roll feeds easily.
To sum it up
A Shooting Chrony is a valuable addition to your shooting equipment. Once you start using one, there is no end of useful things you
can find to do with it. The way the Chrony is made, you can start
with a basic machine and add capability as you see fit. Next to
the guns, themselves, this is one of the handiest things any shooter
can own.
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