it depends what height and angle are shootting it from but counting air resistance 100 yeard not very far. i know you are talking airsoft guns and you should get atleat 280 fps. the higher the better
0.299792458 millimeter
Can't be answered withou knowing the mass of the pellet.
Can not be answered without knowing how heavy the pellet is, how fast it will be leaving the muzzle, pellet shape, location where it will be shot.
.177 caliber pellets come in different weights, this has an effect on how far the pellet will travel. You can expect a pellet to travel anywhere from a few hundred feet to over a 1/4 mile with ease. Depending on the weight of the pellet. Light weight pellets will travel further than a heavy pellet but are less accurate. Where a heavy pellet will fly straighter and have more knock down impact.
Marcellin Pellet has written: 'Naples contemporaine' -- subject(s): Description and travel, History
Air Soft guns are not designed to fire Pellets. The shape is just wrong but there are steel BB in the 6mm size avalable. But because they are heaver than plastic they fire or travel slower. If the Air Soft gun is not designed to use them they may actually ruin or break the air gun.
I believe you are asking about a Beeman1051 air rifle. Air rifle companies do not advertise the distance pellets travel, because there are several factors involved, like the weight of the pellet the effects of crosswind and the power source. But they do advertise the FPS (Feet Per Second) The 1051 is rated at 1000 FPS. I would say the the pellet will travel well over 100 yards.
Manufactures never state "How Far" a pellet will travel. They just say several thousand yards or something like that to cover themselves. It really depends on the power plant in the air gun and the weight of the pellet. (YES pellets come in different weights) obviously a lightweight pellet will travel farther than a heavy pellet. But a Heavy pellet will fly straighter and have more knock down impact than a lightweight pellet. Wind, altitude and angle all have an effect on length of shot.
About 1" past the muzzle.
It all depends on the power source. C02, Pump, Spring or PCP. PCP will travel the furthest
There are different speeds involved.* An electrical signal travels about 200,000 km/second in a wire - about 2/3 of the so-called "speed of light". * The drift velocity (average velocity) is typically less than a millimeter per second. * Individual electrons travel at a significant fraction of the speed of light.
It all depends on the gun and what powers it. Pump. Green gas, C02, Spring. Some fire at 150 FPS some fire at 450 FPS. (Feet per second)