What qualifies as a quality post

Favorite airguns often pass with the seasons as new models are released and our old favorites sit unused in dark corners. Ultimately ending up for sale in the classifieds for someone else to try.

As far as what constitutes a quality post, it reminds me of a comment I heard at a meeting of experts, where one of them said:

"While I don't really know much about it, and may not be qualified to answer, nonetheless I have a strong opinion on the topic!"

That was one of the most honest and candid comments I'd ever said in front of witnesses.

Other than not starting arguments in your posts, or broadly degrading other folks' airgun selections, I think that people appreciate posts with:

New or insightful information, especially on the performance of specific models. Including the sharing of how you've corrected any technical problems you've had.

Newbie questions are always fine, especially after the questioner has done some very basic forum research on the topic. Very broad or general questions like 'what's the best airgun' have usually been asked over and over. Spend 10 minutes to see what others have said. Then you will be able to ask an informed question narrowed down to some specific points which people are happy to answer.

There are several forum categories. Try to keep your questions in the general category for the topic.

There are dedicated forum monitors who review posts and occasionally move one to a more appropriate forum category or very occasionally edit out unsuitable comments.

There are probably a few thousand people visiting on a forum like this over a year, many from countries other than the US. Many of them tend to post and focus on a particular forum. So you'll see a very wide range of posting and language styles. And sometimes, when people are strongly opinionated in their posts, it can be difficult to tell which of the posters have 50 years of good technical airgun experience, and who might have just gotten their 1st airgun as a present and now wants to tell everyone their opinion on how good (or awful) it is.

And some posters, especially the retired guys with time on their hands, apparently just like to ramble on in order to hear themselves talking ;-}

JP
 
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Favorite airguns often pass with the seasons as new models are released and our old favorites sit unused in dark corners. Ultimately ending up for sale in the classifieds for someone else to try.

As far as what constitutes a quality post, it reminds me of a comment I heard at a meeting of experts, where one of them said:

"While I don't really know much about it, and may not be qualified to answer, nonetheless I have a strong opinion on the topic!"

That was one of the most honest and candid comments I'd ever said in front of witnesses.

Other than not starting arguments in your posts, or broadly degrading other folks' airgun selections, I think that people appreciate posts with:

New or insightful information, especially on the performance of specific models. Including the sharing of how you've corrected any technical problems you've had.

Newbie questions are always fine, especially after the questioner has done some very basic forum research on the topic. Very broad or general questions like 'what's the best airgun' have usually been asked over and over. Spend 10 minutes to see what others have said. Then you will be able to ask an informed question narrowed down to some specific points which people are happy to answer.

There are several forum categories. Try to keep your questions in the general category for the topic.

There are dedicated forum monitors who review posts and occasionally move one to a more appropriate forum category or very occasionally edit out unsuitable comments.

There are probably a few thousand people visiting on a forum like this over a year, many from countries other than the US. Many of them tend to post and focus on a particular forum. So you'll see a very wide range of posting and language styles. And sometimes, when people are strongly opinionated in their posts, it can be difficult to tell which of the posters have 50 years of good technical airgun experience, and who might have just gotten their 1st airgun as a present and now wants to tell everyone their opinion on how good (or awful) it is.

And some posters, especially the retired guys with time on their hands, apparently just like to ramble on in order to hear themselves talking ;-}

JP
Now THAT'S a quality post! Lol 😂
 
I didn't join this forum to purchase or sell anything EVER! Final answer!
So a quality post means diddly squat to me. ;)

My favorite pesting PCP is my PP750......My best/most powerful PCP is my Brocock Sniper XR Magnum.

My favorite springers are my Diana 48 and HW97K
You know, quite frankly I don't know much about the PP750 (I'm sure it's great) but I wouldn't mind owning any of the rifles you quoted.
 
I really love air guns
I am a bit of an enthusiast
I was wondering what qualifies as a quality post on here...
What's everyone's favorite airgun so far
I'm between my Zelos and Wildcat Mk3 for favorite go to for pesting, but the Notos for small pesting and plinking is still great for a compact low dollar option. Call me crazy but I actually tend to grab it over my Edgun Lelya, for backyard plinking sessions.

If you don't mind something a little less compact, not that it's huge and heavy by any means, but the Zelos is amazing quality and consistency for the price. My .22 has been very consistent and not pellet picky at all. I'm thinking of buying a .25 too since I enjoy it so much. I paid $430 brand new for my current one, but even at $600 normal retail it's worth it in my opinion
 
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Scammers took advantage of members through Classifieds so Admin instituted 10-day waiting period/10-post minimum for access. Scammers managed the ten days but had nothing to add to conversations so lots of, "Awesome," "Cool," and, "Neat," posts were made. I surmise Admin refined rules to 10 "quality" posts, as a response. Wouldn't sweat the "quality" post issue as long as efforts are made to be part of a conversation. WM
 
Yes, I am in the same boat with the 10 post rule. I hope that contributing to a thread counts. I am sick of the deadbeat scammers on various forums and I understand it. I ask (ed) most of my questions on facebook forums of specific guns, but I will have questions for this group as I burn more $$ in this hobby!!

Well...at least I don't have a boat anymore!!
 
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Favorite airguns often pass with the seasons as new models are released and our old favorites sit unused in dark corners. Ultimately ending up for sale in the classifieds for someone else to try.

As far as what constitutes a quality post, it reminds me of a comment I heard at a meeting of experts, where one of them said:

"While I don't really know much about it, and may not be qualified to answer, nonetheless I have a strong opinion on the topic!"

That was one of the most honest and candid comments I'd ever said in front of witnesses.

Other than not starting arguments in your posts, or broadly degrading other folks' airgun selections, I think that people appreciate posts with:

New or insightful information, especially on the performance of specific models. Including the sharing of how you've corrected any technical problems you've had.

Newbie questions are always fine, especially after the questioner has done some very basic forum research on the topic. Very broad or general questions like 'what's the best airgun' have usually been asked over and over. Spend 10 minutes to see what others have said. Then you will be able to ask an informed question narrowed down to some specific points which people are happy to answer.

There are several forum categories. Try to keep your questions in the general category for the topic.

There are dedicated forum monitors who review posts and occasionally move one to a more appropriate forum category or very occasionally edit out unsuitable comments.

There are probably a few thousand people visiting on a forum like this over a year, many from countries other than the US. Many of them tend to post and focus on a particular forum. So you'll see a very wide range of posting and language styles. And sometimes, when people are strongly opinionated in their posts, it can be difficult to tell which of the posters have 50 years of good technical airgun experience, and who might have just gotten their 1st airgun as a present and now wants to tell everyone their opinion on how good (or awful) it is.

And some posters, especially the retired guys with time on their hands, apparently just like to ramble on in order to hear themselves talking ;-}

JP
> “Retired and rambling? That’s fair—I’ve earned the time and the miles. But let’s not forget, I started exactly where a lot of folks here did: green, curious, and hungry to learn. Back then, it was the old-school crew who took time to explain why a POI shift at 75 yards mattered or how to tune a reg for cold weather. If they’d brushed me off as noise, I wouldn’t be here paying it forward today. > > Forums live or die on shared curiosity. Dismissing newcomers or seasoned voices just because of post count or punctuation misses the point. Experience isn’t measured in how long you’ve been here—it’s in how much you’re willing to share.”
 
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My favorite is the one I am currently shooting. I prefer springers to PCP's even on windy days like today. Rolling Stones won the toss today, Some Girls and Exile on Main Street back to back.

The TX200 .177 has the spotlight for another 40 minutes then I am going to shoot my HW97k .20 until it is time to leave.

Space is free on the forums, leave some room and make it easy on my wind burnt eyeballs to read these posts.

IMG_2386.jpeg
 
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