...is the Crosman Copperhead Pointed, at 1250/$11.95 (.177 cal) it is 16% less costly than the Crosman Premier, 43% less costly than the JSB Exact and 55% less costly than the Beeman FTS.
Although the 'Pointed' name implies a sharp point head, it is more like a cross between a pointed and domed head, I would better described it as a semi-pointed pellet.
Crosman Pointed compared to JSB Exact .177 cal Crosman Pointed .22 calIn some of my airguns it has proved to be one of the most accurate pellets I have shoot from. It has being capable of consistent sub-inch c-t-c 5-shot groups, at up to 50 yrd from my Logun Domin8or .22, BSA Hornet .22 and Air Arms EV² .177
8 groups of 5 shots ea. from the EV² at 30 meter ~ 33 yrdIt weights 7.9 gr in .177 and 14.31 gr in .22, so it is a relatively lightweight pellet, nevertheless it attains excellents ballistics performance, being rated by Chairgun2 as BC=.028 in .177 and BC=.024, which is theorically better than Crosman Premiers (.177 cpl=.023, .177 cph=.025, .22 cp=.019), JSB Exact .177 (.177 jsb=.022, .22 jsb=.032) and Beeman FTS (.177 fts=.014, .22 fts=.016)
I have chronographed the Crosman Pointed .177 along with the JSB Exact from my EV², and then calculated BC for both pellets with a little different results from what is published in Chairgun2. From my chronographed data the Crosman Pointed .177 has yielded a BC=.025, while the JSB Exact .177 has yielded a BC=.026
Crosman Pointed .177JSB Exact .177