Quote from johnny108 on Aug 5th, 2012, 5:44pm:Read reviews that the cold steel big-bore blowgun is a bit oversized, and a bit underpowered. Along with being overpriced, compared to what you can do with some aluminum tubing on your own. Never pay full price for a length of tubing. The math isn't that bad- you can do just fine with darts you make, and heavy aluminum or steel conduit tubing.
I've got a cold steel blowgun, and like it a lot. I got the 5' model and bought some extra darts with it. The pipe is great, if overpriced, and the darts work, but not near as well as my homemade ones. Though expensive, these things are a hassle free way to get your hands on a good blowgun. I find I can use the same darts in either emt or the cold steel, but the emt has significant drag against the cones. It got better when I mounted a gun cleaning rod to my drill and polished the bore with polishing compound, but the cold steel is still better. I like pvc better than emt, because it's smoother, and the sag can be taken care of my wrapping some aluminum angle stock on it. Really, the sag doesn't seem to affect how it shoots or aims unless it's really long, but for some reason people get all worked up about it. For a long time (decades) all I ever used was 3/4" grey pvc with no modifications at all. Now I prefer a mouthpiece of some kind and, mainly for aesthetic reasons, a stiff, straight pipe (yeah, I know, "that's what she said," right?)
I think 3' is too short but 20mm is about right. I've been hunting game like rats, mice, rabbits and squirrels for 20+ years, off and on, And find a 5' 3/4" pvc blowgun (about .60 caliber, I think) is perfect. The cold steel is stiffer and prettier, but not more effective. Copper works well but it dents easily. I also have one made from A 5' piece of carbon fiber tube that's .46 caliber. I find that the darts have to be a lot lighter for this one, but the speed of the darts is much greater, so that the darts actually penetrate deeper in wood than my cold steel darts. I haven't really explored the hunting potential of this one much, but keep it handy in the barn for mice and rats.
If you get the cold steel darts, you'll notice that the cones are often warped. Putting them in hot water usually solves this problem. For hunting, I use broad heads made from xactos or nails hammered flat, mounted with a brass collar and hot glue to a thin dowel or bamboo skewer, about 10" long and weighing about 5-6 grams, with milk jug cones. The center of gravity is well forward of the middle of the shaft (important). These fly straight and hit hard enough to penetrate well and kill efficiently with good shot placement. I've also used simple nail darts made with finish nails, head hammered flat and sharpened with tape and plastic cones. The accuracy and range with these is not as good as the others, though.
Another thing to consider is your blowing technique. I use my tongue pressed against the roof of my mouth as a valve and apply some pressure with my lungs. Then I release the pressure and blow hard at the same time, kind of like saying "teee". This literally doubled my effective range, but it takes a little practice to achieve consistency.