Benjamin .177cal Hollow Point Lead Pellets - 7.9 Grain (750 Count)
- Brand:
- Benjamin
- Model Number:
- 14020
- UPC:
- 028478140042
- EAN:
- 0028478140042
- Walmart SKU:
- 35233399
| Price Type | Price | Date |
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Highest Price
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$19.99 | |
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Lowest Price
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$16.99 | |
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Most Recent Price
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$19.99 |
Price history data is not available for this product at the moment.
Current Trend: No Walmart.com pricing data available for analysis.
Customer Insights: Rated 4.19/5 from 21 reviews.
I went through more than half of them at 20 yd's with only 3-4 flyers, they provided consistent dime size groups. At 75 yd's ; 1000 FPS ; straight, but 14 inches low.
I have used these for years , they are great for long range hunting or impact targets , in a higher powered air rifle they pack a nice highly accurate punch and are uniform in size and weight for consistent shot's at long range , would not recommend for less than 500 FPS rifles as they would just be to heavy and drop would be an issue , better to use Destroyers for these rifles and pistols . I have fired thousands of these and to me they are pretty close to perfect . I usually use these in .22 for my brace of high powers but the .177 are very good as well in 1000 FPS rifles .
I shoot paper targets at 45 feet using an artillery hold and I have found these pellets to be the best of the 12 different brands of pellets I own. On three different days, I shot 10 pellets from each rifle and the groupings with a dime sized center to center measurement are (from lowest to highest) - 23, 24, 24, 27, 29. None of the other 11 pellets came close to that kind of grouping. I found the quality to be good and the pellet "fit" consistent. Plus, paying less than $10 for 750 pellets is a great value.
Every break barrel pellet rifle I have has a pellet that it shoots better than others. My main gun I use nowadays has been performing well with RWS Superdomes and Gamo Rockets but not so much with any of the Crosman pellets, which my other guns to fine with. I was able to shoot smaller than a dime size 5 shot groups at 20 yards with these on the first go around. I think I paid a dollar more for these than the Crosman hollow points, and these have 250 more per tin. As with any break barrel pellet rifle you gotta just try different pellets and see what works. These far exceeded my expectations as they shot as good or better than any of the other pellets I have tried in this particular air rifle. They all fit snuggly in the breach, which I think is good. Pellets that fit tight always seem to be more accurate. Give em a try, no guarantees they will be what your gun likes, but there is only one way to find out.
i was supposed to pick it up at store but they shipped straight to my home,that was awesome.
These pellets is the same as the Crosman Hollow Point Pellets, just a different tin. Both are made by Crosman here in the USA.
I have 2- .177 pellet rifles... One of which LOVES these benjamin Hollow points.. It is my Crosman Optimus & these r the best pellet for this gun. Strange how I put a RWS 7 gr.BasicLine or a RWS 8.2gr. super point fieldline ... with terrible results. As soon as you put a Benjamin Hollow point or a Crosman Premier Hollow Point in it.. all of a sudden it is hitting inside a Dime at 30 yards...so sure important to see what works for your gun.. I never thought ammo would be this Variable.
Inexpensive, pretty accurate with most springers, there are some flyers, would make for great break in as well as hunting.
Poor Craftsmanship, pellets made by Benjamin for a Benjamin gun fit extremely tight in barrel due to the stamping or mold process. Im glad I bought JSB Diablo pellets100 x better.
These may work better in other airguns, but I have a RWS Diana 34 where the pellets vary in tightness in the barrel. Attached is a picture showing a pattern of ten pellets fired at a distance of 15 yards, 45 feet. The coin is a dime, the size of the target area on expected prey. Two of the pellets required a fair amount of force to set in the barrel, and in the picture hit inside the black dot. Two pellets required less force to set in the barrel. The less force needed to set the pellet, meant that the pellet had a smaller diameter, the broader pattern it had and the lower it hit on the target. When 60% of the pellets fell outside the desired area, and at least 50% would have missed the target entirely, this is not what I expect for accuracy. To be honest, I have yet to find pellets that shoot consistently out of that airgun. Every pellet brand I've tried so far has not had consistent diameters, which the airgun doesn't like.
Detailed price history for the past 90 days
No Walmart.com pricing data available for analysis.
Third-Party Sellers prices have ranged from $16.99 (Apr 29) to $19.99 (Jun 5) over the past 90 days. Current price is 14.8% above the 90-day average of $17.42.
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| $19.99 | $+3.00 | +17.7% | |
| $16.99 | $+0.00 | +0.0% | |
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