It's been a few years since I have been in this hobby and the technology has changed a lot. I am looking for something for bench rest with max shots per fill. I have $1200-1700 to spend. So where should I start looking?? Thanks.
Your right about the options. Caliber 22. Pellets only. Either way on the stock. I would like the ability to turn the power down if needed with a button or switch no taking the gun out the stock to do that. Of course a regulator would be fine no adjustment. Wanting a rifle to get from 80 to 150 shots per fill shooting pellets in the 820-890 fps range.What style (bullpup, traditional, tactical)? Tunable or out-of-the-box accuracy? Caliber? Pellets & slugs or just Pellets? Synthetic or Wood stock (if traditional)? Please fill in the blanks. That will determine the answers you get. Options for airguns have EXPLODED in the last 5 years or so. Decisions aren't as easy or limited as they were before.
Yeah been binging on YouTube videos for the last 2 days!!! It's unbelievable the amount of options out there now.There are just way too many variables to allow a good answer. Truth be told, ANY $1,700 rifle, assuming a good barrel, could be a competitive BR rifle. It depends much more on your preferred style of rifle.
I already have a compressor...still works greatIs your budget including the air source? Hand pumping gets old fast on a larger tube or bottle gun. Compressors are costly or roll the dice with a yong heng.
If the rifle is budgeted to say 1500 bucks, that gives you a great starting point with a very good platform. You are talking daystate, FX, uragan, AA, BSA, etc. Very good 2nd hand guns can be had for that price also. Choose wisely.
The shooting range is 100 yards.How far are you shooting? 100yd BR? 25 and/or 50?
For 20/50 yard BR with the power you're talking about my choice would be the Air Arms S500/S510 in .22. Slinging JSB 18.1's at 915 mine gets 75 shots. Turn down the transfer port adjuster and it'll do 80-100 easy.
Throw a weaker hammer spring in there and you'll have no problems getting 100+ shots.
I would suggest a 22 high on power to push the heavier jsb pellets for 100 yards. I guess I might be spoiled as recent come over from powder guns but I find 18 gr projectiles quite frustrating to shoot at that far of a distance.The shooting range is 100 yards.
That's definitely a gun on my top list right now.Bud,
Give the Brocock Sniper XR/XR Magnum a real hard look. They don’t have all the hype surrounding them like some of the boutique brands, but they flat shoot. Those of us on this forum who have them, love them. And they are adjustable via the power knob on the right side of the action. No taking it out of the stock unless you want to get after the regulator or hammer spring. Mine goes from 610fps to 840fps shooting the 22 caliber Hades with just a flick of the wrist, and shoots dots at both settings.
Helluva gun.
Justin
Definitely check out the BRK Brococks… They simply work, out da box, no drama, fuss or worries. Clean the barrel, mount scope and get to shooting. I own three, each shoot great and have been reliable from day one. No extra, after the purchase attachments and doodads necessary… just plain solid PCPs. Good luck!That's definitely a gun on my top list right now.