Tuning No Hobby For Old Men

Since 2020 I have bought about a dozen air guns. When I buy, I also invest in parts. Over time almost all air guns will need something. I see it as necessary to be able to be as self sufficient as possible. But that’s me. I understand the OP point.

I plan to retire in less than 3 years and I am pretty sure I need two more rifles and three pistols before she cuts me off…fear the pillow.
 
Since 2020 I have bought about a dozen air guns. When I buy, I also invest in parts. Over time almost all air guns will need something. I see it as necessary to be able to be as self sufficient as possible. But that’s me. I understand the OP point.

I plan to retire in less than 3 years and I am pretty sure I need two more rifles and three pistols before she cuts me off…fear the pillow.
The Mrs and I have an agreement I spend $100 she gets to spend $200., Worked out well so far.
 
The Mrs and I have an agreement I spend $100 she gets to spend $200., Worked out well so far.

My adult ( now married ) daughter bought me a nice coffee mug for Father’s Day when she was just a young 13 year old. It read, “Dad’s the real boss, right Mom?”
 
Since 2020 I have bought about a dozen air guns. When I buy, I also invest in parts. Over time almost all air guns will need something. I see it as necessary to be able to be as self sufficient as possible. But that’s me. I understand the OP point.

I plan to retire in less than 3 years and I am pretty sure I need two more rifles and three pistols before she cuts me off…fear the pillow.
Same here. I have two complete sets of o-rings for each of my PCPs
 
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My SCBA tank is due today, the filling whip tomorrow, and the stupid little double male 8mm I need will be here...Oct 4...grr. Oh well I can still direct fill until then. Still working on shutting down my business, forgot about my dosimeters and got them all sent back. I'm sure there are other things hiding in the weeds too. One day it will all be done, soon I hope.
 
I'll be 76 later this month. I'm discovering that my patience is wearing thin maintaining PCPs and the associated tanks, fittings, and air compressors. I've always been self sufficient in servicing PCPs and equipment for them. The forums and Youtube are great tools for assisting users how to diagnose and fix most problems. However, it is inevitable that PCPs will develop leaks over time as o-rings harden and deteriorate, losing their ability to hold back high pressure air. In particular, I've found regulators to be a finicky and difficult item to rebuild and readjust to work after rebuilds. I enjoyed tinkering and got a sense of satisfaction when I could troubleshoot and solve my own problems without spending $$ for shipping, repairs, and dealer rebuild costs. Lately it seems I've spent more time chasing leaks and repairing PCPs than I do using them.

I'm going full circle in my shooting hobby interest. I love shooting sports but the savings in PCPs vs. firearms is less than it was when I started gravitating to air guns 25 years ago. Name brand PCPs are very pricy compared to firearm prices. Pellet and slug prices have increased to the point of losing their former price savings over rimfire rounds and reloading costs. The only disadvantage of powder burners is cleaning them after using them. But I have firearms that are 40 plus years old that don't need the rebuilds and servicing that PCPs inevitably require. I feel like the old sheriff Tommy Lee Jones at the end of No Country For Old Men. I'm tired of it all.
Steve, I found your post and reread the entire thread last evening. I also enjoyed our discussion yesterday on compressors.

As we talked about our mutual hobby, it occurred to me that we have similar circumstances. I have seven pretty high end PCPs. Two RAWs ( HM1000x .22, TM1000x .177) two FX Guns ( Royale .22 400 and Mike’s old Boss .30), a Weihrauch .22 Carbine, a Revere .22 side lever and most recently a Taipan Long Vet2 700mm. Also have two nice Anschutz .22 LRs ( 64 MPR and a 1907).

We both have an outdoor local shooting range and I also really can’t target practice in my backyard for fear of neighbors complaining. I am outside city limits and according to the Sheriff, I can legally shoot in backyard but it’s rare when I do.

Having said all of that, maybe you ‘thin the herd’ and keep only one or two of your most reliable PCPs and the same with your PB‘rs. You sell the rest and now have a more manageable stable. I realize you can repair anything, but I sense you want to spend more time shooting than fixing. Me too.

The frustration level will go way down keeping up with leaks in multiple rifles and all the constant tinkering. You’ll shoot more and spend more quality time for the paper target shooting. This seems to strike a good balance between selling everything all at once and reaching a good compromise and selectively keeping your favorites.

p.s. Note to self: “You need to take your own advice.”

The reason this thread is so popular ( I.e., 3,000+ views) is because there are many of us soul searching and you got us all thinking about our inventory of air guns and accessories. Great thread.
 
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I'll be 76 later this month. I'm discovering that my patience is wearing thin maintaining PCPs and the associated tanks, fittings, and air compressors. I've always been self sufficient in servicing PCPs and equipment for them. The forums and Youtube are great tools for assisting users how to diagnose and fix most problems. However, it is inevitable that PCPs will develop leaks over time as o-rings harden and deteriorate, losing their ability to hold back high pressure air. In particular, I've found regulators to be a finicky and difficult item to rebuild and readjust to work after rebuilds. I enjoyed tinkering and got a sense of satisfaction when I could troubleshoot and solve my own problems without spending $$ for shipping, repairs, and dealer rebuild costs. Lately it seems I've spent more time chasing leaks and repairing PCPs than I do using them.

I'm going full circle in my shooting hobby interest. I love shooting sports but the savings in PCPs vs. firearms is less than it was when I started gravitating to air guns 25 years ago. Name brand PCPs are very pricy compared to firearm prices. Pellet and slug prices have increased to the point of losing their former price savings over rimfire rounds and reloading costs. The only disadvantage of powder burners is cleaning them after using them. But I have firearms that are 40 plus years old that don't need the rebuilds and servicing that PCPs inevitably require. I feel like the old sheriff Tommy Lee Jones at the end of No Country For Old Men. I'm tired of it all.
Buy a TX200 , no leaks .
@ 80 years old Stan in KY
 
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Keeping my inventory of nearly 20 PCP's up and running is an accepted chore ... as getting into the shop listening to great music, getting hands on the tools and guns that time to time need some love is VERY Therapeutic exercising the aging brain cells being far more enjoyable than sitting in front of the TV set or other ways to Vegetate getting nothing else meaningfully done.

I accept it w/o issue ;)
 
Keeping my inventory of nearly 20 PCP's up and running is an accepted chore ... as getting into the shop listening to great music, getting hands on the tools and guns that time to time need some love is VERY Therapeutic exercising the aging brain cells being far more enjoyable than sitting in front of the TV set or other ways to Vegetate getting nothing else meaningfully done.

I accept it w/o issue ;)
Yeah, I can see that you make a good case for the above. It does help that you have excellent tuning and gunsmith skills, which can make all of this more enjoyable.

But, I can understand the other side of this as well, having been very frustrated with fixing ( or breaking) air rifles over the past 9 years. Which is why, I came to you once or twice.
 
I agree with the premise of downsizing and am in the midst parting with unused sundries from other multiple hobbies. As I age (64 years young) I already have lots of necessary chores/work around my property. Never really thought about acquiring more than my four PCPs. Why? Because of HPA insecurity. Now that I have secured a good HPA source, I will simply enjoy what I have and buy more pellets… There is a point of diminishing returns when you own many PCPs. Particularly if doing your own trouble shooting because for “some” myself included it becomes work. Regular maintenance I understand. The title of this thread is the chief clue and may not apply to the younger and stronger follks out there.
 
I agree with the premise of downsizing and am in the midst parting with unused sundries from other multiple hobbies. As I age (64 years young) I already have lots of necessary chores/work around my property. Never really thought about acquiring more than my four PCPs. Why? Because of HPA insecurity. Now that I have secured a good HPA source, I will simply enjoy what I have and buy more pellets… There is a point of diminishing returns when you own many PCPs. Particularly if doing your own trouble shooting because for “some” myself included it becomes work. Regular maintenance I understand. The title of this thread is the chief clue and may not apply to the younger and stronger follks out there.
“There is a point of diminishing returns when you own many PCPs. Particularly if doing your own trouble shooting because for “some” myself included it becomes work. Regular maintenance I understand. “

Well said Luis. This captures what I was trying to covey. Fewer can be better, and I am heading towards buying my first compressor this year, and will finally have air independence after 9 years driving 45 minutes each way to the Dive shop.
 
I've never even investigated using a dive shop. My only bottle is an expired Scott air bottle. I am pretty sure nobody will fill it. I went from a hand pump to the Yong Heng filling guns to the Yong Heng filling the bottle which then fills the guns. That is still my preferred path but I bought a GX CS2 as a backup and sure enough, fill times with the Yong Heng went up about 50% and I bought a piston/connecting rod assembly I will install later this week (might be as soon as tomorrow if I can find time). I also still own 2 hand pumps as my ultimate backup. I wouldn't shoot nearly as much if I had to hand pump but at least I could shoot some. The CS2 is not really a bad way to have air. Takes about 5 minutes to fill a gun with the air filtered through the GX filter but that is a lot quicker and lower effort than a hand pump.

In this small way I may be a bit like Scott. I like figuring out what is wrong with a compressor or gun. I'd rather work on a gun than a compressor but I'd rather work on either of them than one of my vehicles or household appliances. I do all of those things when necessary. But if something starts really getting to me I find another solution. Hire it done or get rid of the source of the frustration. Or put it aside for awhile. I will be 70 later this year and I cannot work as long as I used to but I can still do things and I prefer that to sitting in front of the TV (although Youtubes on airguns are pretty enjoyable).

I'm at 8 PCPs now, 7 of which work. That seems like more than I really need so I've started talking to my son and son-in-law about their potential need for an airgun for them and my grandkids to use. The grandkids are a bit young (9, 6, 5, and 3) which also puts more demands on my kids time but I think that is where at least a couple guns will go. I figured out a small thing on the non-working PCP so I also need to find the time to do some work on it. My son accepts that airguns are effective against squirrels (he knows I've killed 72) but I think I will need to show my son-in-law but that is OK. His father is a farmer so he should be able to find us a place to hunt close to his house and I will make a road trip. It would be nice to pass the hobby on a generation or two.
 
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