Air Arms Utah Airguns Pyramyd AIR FX Airguns Daystate Diana Airgun Depot Edgun West Palm Beach Airguns DonnyFL: PCP Air Rifle Shop and Airgun Moderators The Pellet Shop Airforce Airguns
Saber Tactical Optisan Side-Shot Scope Cam NE Airguns Baker Airguns AGS Topgun Airguns Predator International Huben Airguns Huma-Air Shooting Supplies Hurricane Luftvapen AEA Precision Airguns H&N Impulse Air ZAN Projectiles Hawke Optics Stud Mag Loader RX Target Systems Sports Match Scope Mounts Altaros Banner CTA Thomas Air Hatsan USA Georgia Air Guns Skout Airguns Nielsen Specialty Ammo Patch Worm Weihrauch Sport Talon Tunes Airgun-Revisions JTS PARD ST7 PPP RTI AirStryk Industries Macavity Arms

Other  A couple of new PCPs from Stoeger

Airgun Revisions is a dealer -



Can AGN purchase and resell Pellets?

@Stubbers I'm not salty at all. I honestly feel a bit bad for you. You blocked me because you were wrong and couldn't handle that hit to your ego. That's sad and it was childish.

Here's the deal though. I know a snake when I see one. Just like you saw my post pointing out your hypocrisy here, you saw my original comment to this post and immediately changed your tune and turned on @oledawg , all while pretending it was an original thought. Others may not see you for what you are right now but give it time. You'll show your true colors to them just like you did to me.

And in case anyone is wondering why he blocked me.... He said we should all have our private messages and even our phones monitored for th sake of security. I politely disagreed. His response was to misquote a previous comment I made followed by immediately blocking me so I couldn't respond. That isn't normal grownup behavior.

Air Arms  Air rifle stock

Wood generally looks better and weighs more and weights not necessarily a bad thing on a spring gun. Sure, it's harder to carry, but it tends to make the rifle hold steadier and make it less hold sensitive. On a spring gun the recoil comes from the piston slamming forward to compress the air and that means you experience the recoil before the pellet leaves the barrel, so anything that's different about the way you hold the gun will cause it to shoot to a slightly different point of impact. This is called hold sensitivity. A very powerful and lightweight airgun will tend to be very hold sensitive, while with a low powered and heavy airgun you might not notice any difference at all. A hold sensitive gun will be more difficult to shoot accurately. The gun is often capable of good accuracy, but holding it in just the right way every time makes it harder to achieve.

Plastic and wood both come in very different grades. Really expensive wood stocks tend to be both beautiful and elaborate, but not necessarily any more functional than a cheaper wood stock. Really cheap wood stocks tend to be made out of ugly wood and covered in shellac to make them look darker and if you strip that off you might find filler underneath. That's what you might find on a low end Chinese gun. High end synthetic stocks often have rails or tactical features built in and often come with camouflage finishes. They feel as solid as a wood stock and usually weigh as much and they are much less affected by heat or humidity than wood. Really cheap synthetic stocks tend to be very lightweight and feel like the cheap plastic they are. For a low end gun I'd prefer wood over plastic. There's also a vast middle ground of ordinary stocks that aren't necessarily ugly or made of cheap plastic.

Benjamin  Huma Regulator on Benjamin Marauder field and Target

it is the volume of the air pocket that has went through the regulator and is waiting for the valve to open to push the pellet out the barrel , and when the pressure drops in that given space from firing a shot the regulator opens and replenishes that pocket of air with "hopefully the same pressure " each time you take a shot ! too much plenum and your reg may not cycle consistently per shot , not enough plenum and a lack of power ,
Okay thank you. That clarifies it well
  • Like
Reactions: joelayfield

Huben  Charging GK1 with Hand Pump

yeah. i am not 70. but after handpumping i am not in tiptop shape to shoot. to control breathing and heartrate definitely my out of shape body needs a break before attempting accurate aiming.
I sometimes take my .22 GK1 to matches. I shot both sub 12 FPE and at 30-ish FPE depending on the match. In both cases, I hand pump the little gun when needed.

My score does not get negatively impacted. Sure, I am not really competing in the first place, but still.

To shoot at 30 FPE, I need to charge from 180 bars to 300 bars, that's about 40 strokes using Huben's own pump.

Help needed Evanix ML

I need help on a .25 cal evanix ML it does not hold air. Is there anyone who works on those?
Thanks
Al
Also, if I find time today to take pictures i will put my last gun up for sale,

a package deal for a Rainstorm .25 with enough spare parts to make this gun or any other Evanix ( but for the REX line ) run for 100 years.

If you do own a Rainstorm or Max-ML this package not only will give you a new gun but parts to make them " Forever guns "

Air Venturi  Avenge-x slugs

What he does in the video is get the exact diameter of the bore.
with slugs, you want just enough surface contact with the lands for a smooth fit.
not too tight..not too loose ..all for better accuracy and consistency
with pellets, there is a forgiveness on using a too tight/loose size due to the shape of the projectile .. slugs are less forgiving

so when he is taking the measurements of the grooves on the slug that has been pushed through the bore, that is the diameter size of the slugs that best suits that bore. weights are another thing that you will have to test out. All bores are slightly different, like a fingerprint, so where someone will tell you to use a certain diameter in the rifle you are using.. yours might vary slightly, so use their suggestions as a marker of where to start your tests.
A conpany like Nielson has a variety of weights and diameters to aid you in finding the right one
Ohhhhhh I see. So he's not changing anything, he's essentially just making a custom mold in a way to figure out the exact size he needs

Gotcha!

Was sitting here a little stoned doing rain man like math in my head wondering how it computes, I mean I don't know everything about metallurgy but was not adding up

Makes alot more sense now LMAO

Thank you!
  • Love
Reactions: manabeknives

FX  Differences b/t FX Wildcat III & Power Pup?

It would be great if I could actually put my hands on other options. But, I've only found the one dealer in Lexington, NC. We have plenty of firearm shops. Airgun dealers are harder to find...


Honorable sub 500$ BullPup mention. Sadly out of stock @ krale for the .22 cal currently. But in stock for a bit more @ huma but they include their tuning regulator.



-Matt

Filter