N/A Is air pistol cheaper in the long run [edit:] than competitive firearms shooting?

Never shot airgun before but getting very interested in it. Partially for the competitive aspect (10m air pistol) and long-term ammo cost being cheaper than powder burning ammo. Dumping in a grand for a competition pistol is a bit daunting, but given that the pellet ammo is so cheap, I'd imagine that it very quickly beats out powder burning ammo in affordability.

Is this something that's you've all found to be true in your experience?

Edit: looking at .177 specifically
 
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Airgun ammo especially smaller calibers are definitely more cost effective than PB ammo. Plus one can shoot a 10m pistol indoors or out as they are quiet to shoot. It's just that PCP airguns need to be filled/charged by handpump, tank or compressor so the initial cost can be daunting but well worth it in my humble opinion.....
 
I can shoot in my basement every day.
I personally wouldn't be able to, but what I would be able to do is go to my local range at certain hours where no firearms shooting is allowed (noise). This is really attractive to me as it'll mean I get more range time where I can actually hit targets and not just dry-fire practice.
 
Airgun ammo especially smaller calibers are definitely more cost effective than PB ammo. Plus one can shoot a 10m pistol indoors or out as they are quiet to shoot. It's just that PCP airguns need to be filled/charged by handpump, tank or compressor so the initial cost can be daunting but well worth it in my humble opinion.....
I'm not opposed to handpumping at the range/an event or eventually investing in a scuba tank. But out of curiosity, is it feasible to have a spare PCP cylinder to just screw in? So I'd pump two or more cylinders in my own time, and then when I'm at the range or an event I already have it all good-to-go.
 
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I'm not opposed to handpumping at the range/an event or eventually investing in a scuba tank. But out of curiosity, is it feasible to have a spare PCP cylinder to just screw in? So I'd pump two or more cylinders in my own time, and then when I'm at the range or an event I already have it all good-to-go.
Yes! Especially the 10m pistols which usually have air cylinders that can be swapped out!
 
I'm not opposed to handpumping at the range/an event or eventually investing in a scuba tank. But out of curiosity, is it feasible to have a spare PCP cylinder to just screw in? So I'd pump two or more cylinders in my own time, and then when I'm at the range or an event I already have it all good-to-go.
My Morini came with two tanks (new not used ) but even back 9 years ago it was over 2k with a pump / https://www.champchoice.com/
 
This may be beside the point if you've already decided on PCP. But you don't have to break the bank to get started. There are good target pistols out there at lower price points, and with self-contained spring-piston or single-stroke pneumatic powerplants.
Is something like a Chiappa FAS 6004 what one would consider single-stroke pneumatic? I'm seeing new ones on MidwayUSA for just under $500, which sounds good. There's also a couple listings on eBay. One $750 on its own and one $850 with the case, an extra o-ring, and some pellets. Seems a little steep to me, unless if I'm missing some notable info? Is this like one of those things where guns manufactured before X-date have some secret sauce and ones manufactured after X-date are made with bubblegum and pig-iron?
 
Yes, the FAS is a good choice. One reservation is that the velocity is a little low to consistently punch cleah holes in target paper:

The Weihrauch HW 75 (aka Beeman P2) is another good SSP choice:

The IZH 46M may be the best entry-level SSP, but now rather hard to find. The easiest-to-charge SSP I've ever shot.

Another popular choice is the uber-classic FWB 65 springer. No longer made, but plenty of them around in good shape.

Lots of other good ones out there! I am not really a target pistolero to be honest, I'm sure others will have good suggestions.
 
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My only experience with the HW 75 was shooting one for five minutes at the Hickory show. I instantly bonded with it and have been looking for a well-priced one ever since! It lacks many refinements of a full-race four-figure match gun of course, but it just has that certain je ne sais quoi about it...
 
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