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Everything posted by pianoman
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God Almighty this looks.....almost......as good as my HW77 stock you refurbed for me Jimmy. No, really, this is looking beautiful already. The beech grain is really beautiful as you bring it out. Weihrauch always sources lovely fullered grains of beech for the HW77. You have to bring this rifle down with you when you visit us next time Jimmy. All the very best dear pal. Simon
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To tune, or not to tune, that is the question ?
pianoman replied to mark williams's topic in General Airgun Discussion
I had my Pro Sport .22 tuned with a Tinbum drop in kit and fettled internals by Tim/Charlie Caller here. He has done a fantastic job for me and my Pro Sport is a dream to shoot. It feels a bit more refined than it did out of the box for sure. But it was a blistering accurate rifle to begin with. Tuning may not vastly improve the accuracy of the barrel but, from my experience, adding the the TBT kit has made my rifle that much nicer and more consistent a rifle that is beautifully smooth and satisfying to shoot with. Certainly, no regrets for having it tuned like this. -
No Phil. The reticle should remain fixed as you focused it, throughout the zoom magnification range. I suppose you have an optical illusion of the reticle enlarging as you zoom down to low mag on your target. But in my experience of scopes, they generally stay put.
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I should give Custom Stock of Sheffield a call. They are bound to make a stock to fit your requirements. and very reasonable prices for the standards of workmanship they produce.
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Hope you are not seriously hurt here mate. All the best for a speedy recovery jjm.
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Well its been a while since I started a thread here..
pianoman replied to Malt's topic in General Airgun Discussion
My sympathies Malt. Very sorry for the loss of your dad. -
Isn't that just beautiful!? Compliments Mark, she looks stunning.
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Hunting with an air rifle, - PCP Vs Springer.
pianoman replied to mark williams's topic in General Airgun Discussion
Well, I have written much in the past about my shooting preferences for spring rifles, and that is the truth of all of us. Our preferences. What is meat for one is poison for another. I came up in air rifle shooting when the spring rifles were the only thing on offer. When commercial PCPs first appeared they were dreadfully inefficient, prone to all manner of leaks and breakdowns and they were fiendishly expensive to buy. More so, if you wanted a really well made custom rifle. And even then... PCPs have improved greatly now; but they are still a swine when they go wrong. I spe -
AA Pro Sport .177 V TX 200 HC MK 3 .177 .
pianoman replied to mark williams's topic in General Airgun Discussion
Mark, I think you have hit the best maximum you can reasonably expect from the rifles you now own and shoot with. Well I have owned a fantastic TX200HC in .177 and now a Pro Sport in .22 and these are honestly such stunningly accurate rifles, you would literally be splitting hairs between them both. I take the Pro Sport on its sweetly compact, single-barrel appearance, thanks to its hidden underlever and the fluted walnut stock is just stunning. But, accuracy on this scale is incredible from both rifles. They share the same barrels. I am now somewhat loathe to buy another air rifle -
If it is the same action and cylinder as the Excel, you can fit a Theoben gas ram I should think Paul. Take it to your gunship and check with them.
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Honestly, no boasting bullshit. I can outshoot a PCP with my spring rifles. I own a Daystate Regal .177 and a Webley FX2000 .22. Both are beautiful to shoot with but, my Air Arms Pro Sport .22 is more accurate producing a tighter single hole pellet group than I can achieve with both these superb PCPs shooting at a zeroing range of 30 metres. I can get the same standards with my on-ticket HW80 .22. That rifle delivers 23 foot pounds of whack, with absolute precision accuracy. It's nice to be able to enjoy the advantages of both PCP and spring actions. But, I'm a spring gun man first to the
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You can only judge a gun by how well you get on with it. How well it shoots, how accurate, how it looks, how you live with it. The Air Arms Pro Sport I have is the first air rifle I have ever owned where I feel absolutely at home with it. My Weihrauchs are fantastic at accurate, efficient hunting in the field. But they just don't look much more than functional, despite some lovely beech wood stocks on them. The Pro Sport is a beautiful combination of functional efficiency and incredible accuracy, with wonderful poise, balance and stunning looks and finish. It ticks every box you could se
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£555 was what I paid for my brand spanking new Pro Sport .22 in a beautiful walnut stock Mark. At second hand values, this sort of price is either a little too optimistic, or, it is a mint condition superbly set-up example that's a one-in-a-thousand supergun. If it's anything like as good as other .177 Air Arms spring rifles, it will be stunningly accurate all right. Have you actually seen the rifle and tried it?
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I will be there Rez. We are supplying the gift and souvenir shop with work. They have just placed a huge order for our mugs, keyrings, fridge magnets and prints.
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No Phil. Still have it here after no interest shown in it whatsoever.
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It took having a regulator made for my Regal and a few other tweeks before it turned into the brilliant rifle it is now. Last year I tried to sell Helen's Huntsman Classic .177. Absolutely stunning rifle with not a thing wrong with it and less than half a tin fired through it. Nobody wanted to know. Best bargain someone missed out on. Looks like I might keep it and put a left hand stock on it. It will be perfect for shooting around farm buildings for rats and ferrals.
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It took having a regulator made for my Regal and a few other tweeks before it turned into the brilliant rifle it is now. Last year I tried to sell Helen's Huntsman Classic .177. Absolutely stunning rifle with not a thing wrong with it and less than half a tin fired through it. Nobody wanted to know. Best bargain someone missed out on. Looks like I might keep it and put a left hand stock on it. It will be perfect for shooting around farm buildings for rats and ferrals.
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Welcome here Josef.
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Anyone tried a downtuned hw30s at 50 meters?
pianoman replied to dutchjozef's topic in General Airgun Discussion
No mate. Seems a tall order for such low muzzle energy to me, but best of luck. -
Has anyone shot with accuracy to 55 yards range on such low muzzle energy as 7 ft/lbs? No, not me either. The rifle looks very well cared-for and customised Josef. You say earlier in your introduction, this one is .177 calibre... But, 55 yards target-precision accuracy with only 7 foot pounds energy? In a breeze/crosswind? It sounds a pretty tall order. It would be good if you could come back and tell us how the rifle and your wife, if not, yourself got along with doing it. I somehow have a sneaky suspicion you'll do it alright with a .177 rifle. All the best. Simon
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How to work out killing distance
pianoman replied to Gtbaker369's topic in General Airgun Discussion
I'm at risk of maybe repeating what the lads have said here because it is sound, positive advice. But, I've been shooting an FAC rated HW80 .22 that's been superbly set-up, very happily for nigh on 20 years now. And the only really useful, practical lesson it has taught me is this. USE THE EXTRA FAC POWER TO COVER SENSIBLE AIR RIFLE HUNTING RANGE DISTANCES FASTER THAN A SUB-12 FT/LBS RIFLE CAN! Use the extra power in the pellet to hit your rabbit faster than sub 12 at the same distances. It amazes me the number of posts about folk wanting to go to FAC power and the questions are alwa -
Edited out. Double post. How the Hell do these things happen?
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I've used WD40 quite happily as a lube by coating a cloth with it and then, rolling a batch of .22 H&N FTTs prior to shooting with my HW80 .22 and HW77 .22 rifles. Had fantastic accuracy and they don't diesel in the breech if you coat your ammo this way. You don't get oil in the skirt that causes it. So far so good. HOWEVER. I have tried lubing .22 JSB Jumbo Heavies 18.83g pellets for my .22 Pro Sport and these pellets do not like lubing with anything one bit. Accurate as you can be when they are washed clean of dust and bits, dried and put to work on the zeroing range. Absolute scatte
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That walnut HW100 stock really looks beautiful Jimmy. All your refurbs end up with a stunning finish.
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You might think so Mitch. But these heavyweight pellets are amazingly good and accurate in my Pro Sport .22 at 11.7 F/P. A hit anywhere on a furry/feathered head with these Heavies and and it's all over and out. And I've found I need only a bit more holdover, about an inch or so, at some pretty impressive long ranges beyond zero too. ATB Simon
