was shooting this morning with my RW 22hp everything going good until I loaded a pellet, pressed the trigger and nothing happened. Gun has air and battery is charged, display shows air and power but rifle is dead. Any ideas?
I wouldn't risk your warranty. The electronics (if thats the problem) can get expensive. It's worth a call to AOA tomorrow. I had an out of warranty airwolf go south 5ish years ago and shipping both ways and the new board was $500 plus. The new electronics only lasted a month but that was the end of the story for me.
I have a question, for someone that is looking from the outside in, why are you buying these electronic trigger rifles if they have even a certain amount of bad habits or is it just the brand or it something else
I do have one, a FWB 90
The trigger is only a small part of the electronic rifle. The entire operating system is electronically controlled, no spring, no hammer. Once you accept the control of electronic circuitry (just like your car), there is, I believe, actually less to go wrong. Overall, I believe the Red Wolf, and its predecessors, have proven to be very reliable. Why do folks buy them? I can only answer for myself. I fine the technology fascinating, With just the selection of another program, you have the equivalent of what would take the re-tuning of a mechanical rifle. And, without the slam-bang operation of a spring and hammer, the operating cycle is eerily smooth and quiet. It's fun.
I have a question, for someone that is looking from the outside in, why are you buying these electronic trigger rifles if they have even a certain amount of bad habits or is it just the brand or it something else
I do have one, a FWB 90
The only time mine did that was when I was adjusting the trigger. If the "second stage" pressure adjustment is just a little off, the rifle won't fire.
The trigger is only a small part of the electronic rifle. The entire operating system is electronically controlled, no spring, no hammer. Once you accept the control of electronic circuitry (just like your car), there is, I believe, actually less to go wrong. Overall, I believe the Red Wolf, and its predecessors, have proven to be very reliable. Why do folks buy them? I can only answer for myself. I fine the technology fascinating, With just the selection of another program, you have the equivalent of what would take the re-tuning of a mechanical rifle. And, without the slam-bang operation of a spring and hammer, the operating cycle is eerily smooth and quiet. It's fun.
Are you sure there's no hammer or spring?
Are you sure there's no hammer or spring?
Assuming you are referring to a totally electronic rifle as the Red Wolf, I'm totally sure. A microprocessor controls the firing cycle. Go to the Daystate site and pull up the schematic drawing of the rifle and parts.