How many parts can you change on an air gun before it is no longer considered the same gun?
If I took an FX Wildcat, for example, and changed the barrel to a LW barrel, I think people would still consider it to be a Wildcat even though ST barrels are an FX trademark and a gun's accuracy comes from the barrel.
it would still be a Wildcat in my eyes if I replaced the stock with an aftermarket one and the stock is what makes it look like a Wildcat...
In a more extreme example, let's say I bought a Marauder. I replace the barrel with a Marmot militia one. I replace the air tube with a bottle adapter and bottle. I replace the stock with one of WAR's aluminum bottle chassis system stocks, the valve with a high power one plus a depinger, replace the hammer with their lightweight hammer and... then I add a regulator.
Now this gun looks, sounds and performs nothing like a Marauder but... if someone tried to sell it to me, I would still consider it to be a marauder. The only way most people would pay $1,000+ for a used Marauder is if you gold plated it 2" thick. On the other hand I would have no trouble selling a used Wildcat for $1000, even if I made it perform like a stock Marauder.
I think that the only thing you could change that would change the guns identity is the action / breach assembly. If it no longer accepted Marauder mags and cocked like a Marauder, it would be something else.
Then again, if I bought a Crossman 2240 pistol and replaced the action with a custom multi shot breach that used Marauder Mags, it would still be sold as a "custom 2240". Even if I replaced the 2240 frame it would (and does) retain it's original title (albeit with the caveat of "heavily customized"). You could change every part of a 2240 and it would never lose it's label...
Ah... I give up... I just gave myself a headache.
If I took an FX Wildcat, for example, and changed the barrel to a LW barrel, I think people would still consider it to be a Wildcat even though ST barrels are an FX trademark and a gun's accuracy comes from the barrel.
it would still be a Wildcat in my eyes if I replaced the stock with an aftermarket one and the stock is what makes it look like a Wildcat...
In a more extreme example, let's say I bought a Marauder. I replace the barrel with a Marmot militia one. I replace the air tube with a bottle adapter and bottle. I replace the stock with one of WAR's aluminum bottle chassis system stocks, the valve with a high power one plus a depinger, replace the hammer with their lightweight hammer and... then I add a regulator.
Now this gun looks, sounds and performs nothing like a Marauder but... if someone tried to sell it to me, I would still consider it to be a marauder. The only way most people would pay $1,000+ for a used Marauder is if you gold plated it 2" thick. On the other hand I would have no trouble selling a used Wildcat for $1000, even if I made it perform like a stock Marauder.
I think that the only thing you could change that would change the guns identity is the action / breach assembly. If it no longer accepted Marauder mags and cocked like a Marauder, it would be something else.
Then again, if I bought a Crossman 2240 pistol and replaced the action with a custom multi shot breach that used Marauder Mags, it would still be sold as a "custom 2240". Even if I replaced the 2240 frame it would (and does) retain it's original title (albeit with the caveat of "heavily customized"). You could change every part of a 2240 and it would never lose it's label...
Ah... I give up... I just gave myself a headache.