A pellet clip is the same as a bullet clip except for pellets. It fits in the breech of a pistol or rifle and holds the pellets that are waiting to be fired. Some clips are in the handle of the pistol.
The dome pellet is considered to be the universal pellet.
More pellet.
Any of the PCP class of pellet guns or rifles. These are high pressure pellet guns that are capable of shooting a 50cal pellet.
Never put more than one pellet in the barrel of a rifle at any time. Break barrel rifles only hold one pellet for each shot. There are some air rifles that hold several pellets in a clip and are fired one at a time. These rifles are usually have C02 power plants. Break barrel rifles are spring or nitro piston systems.
Are you talking about an airgun pellet? If so, then hitting the sheet with force will deform the pellet. If it's a air-soft plastic pellet it will most likely shatter or at least crack or chip the pellet. Never reuse a pellet after it has been fired. It may damage the gun.
With the right pellet you you can, But it should be a hunting Pellet (Hollow-point) and it should be a heavy pellet not a light weight pellet with at least 900 to1000 FPS.
Pellet guns and Pellet rifles.
Pellet feed contains air in the pellet. Also, the density of the pellet is lighter than water, thus enabling it to float on the surface of water.
Use a .177 cleaning rod and push the pellet back out of the loading port.
The model 922 was made between 1978-89 so it is way out of production. A few years ago I was looking for a clip for a different rifle so I went on the web and did a search for "Air Gun Repair "( there are several people who repair older airguns that are out of production ) I emailed them and asked if they had the clip. Several answered me and said "yes." Hopefully you will be able to find it this way.
Laurent Pellet was born in 1970.
No. a 177 is a 4.5mm pellet. A 5mm is a 20 cal pellet. A 5.5mm is a 22 cal pellet Don't try it in the wrong airgun.