On fifth tin with an EDgun Lelya 2. Just so nice. When shopping for a .25 bullpup, could not find enough information about disassembly of Taipan. Maybe that has changed for the better. This is not an issue with the Edgun, with Eduard and EDgunWest supplying plenty of how-to videos.
My Lelya keeps pleasing. It seems quieter and cocks and locks more smoothly with break-in. The receiver block on mine still needs a piece of walnut placed in the bolt opening, with a gentle but firm rubber mallet tap to get it off. I consider this an example of precise fit, not a disadvantage. Regular cleaning of the bore is recommended, and I do it. Accuracy is superb; only my personal limitations (like heart beat bouncing the rifle), available field rest options, along with irregular wind in the mountains limit what this particular bullpup can achieve. One question before my purchase was the idea that the short stock might be an issue. It simply has not been an issue, it is another advantage. Right now I believe it is sighted in zero at 70 yards, holding under 1 mildot at 50 yards, holding under 2 dots at 30, and 1 dot holding over at 15 yards.
Know that it has a stabilizing weight to it, for such a compact piece. I would love to get a composite stock but find the laminated works great. I too bought a Huma regulator at time of purchase but have not had reason to adjust anything, and I shoot tin pellets.
Having large hands, the pistol grip is just so nice, with the excellent indentation for the third finger, along with the trigger feel. There is nothing distracting at all about a field proven good trigger, and this is one.
Since this gun is primarily for the woods, I installed a single point sling on it; works great. Just got to remember to move the pocket knife to the other side so as not to scrape the stock with the knife's clip!