Archive for the ‘pump gun’ Category

Why Beeman air rifles simply work well.

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

It is a part of Beeman air rifles

These series of air rifles carry a distinction that earned the reputation for adult air guns. Makes are designed to be easy to use and with proper care last generations. The material that goes into making these is crafted into parts and barrels that out perform other brands.

The Beeman R1 supermagnum air rifle The Beeman R1 supermagnum air rifle
Used From: $109.99

Beeman RS1 Dual-Caliber Air Rifle Combo air rifle Beeman RS1 Dual-Caliber Air Rifle Combo air rifle
Sale Price: $135.55

Like getting 2 rifles for the price of one! Includes .177 caliber and .22 caliber barrels. Each Beeman RS1 has a red fiber optic front sight and green fiber optic rear (fully adjustable). The Beeman 4x32 scope will help get the most accuracy possible from the gun...

Beeman .177 Caliber Air Rifle Combo w/3-9X32 Scope Md: 1062 . Beeman .177 Caliber Air Rifle Combo w/3-9X32 Scope Md: 1062 .
List Price: $154.59
Sale Price: $124.58

Beeman .177 Caliber Air Rifle Combo w/3-9X32 Scope Md: 1062, , Type: Air Rifle Action: Spring Caliber: .177 Capacity: 1 Finish: Blued Barrel Length: 20.5" Sights: Fixed front, adjustable rear Weight: 10 lbs Stock: Hardwood Length: 46...


The receiver cap on certain rifles is milled from a block of steel. This insures accuracy and consistent alignment of other parts. Other makers of air rifles use thin sheet metal or worse plastic. Safety is also another important factor with shooting airguns. These are made on a lathe from steel. The trigger is disconnected from firing with most designs. This is opposed to just being blocked. Many safety buttons are made from plastic or thin sheet metal.
Styling for these is also from the most steel and solid metal for parts. Many others try to mold plastic or thin sheet metal to mask the cheapness in their manufacture.
Barrels are often not true rifled like a Beeman. This can lead to accuracy issues. They are also not crowned, usually stamped with long grooves that cause distortion in the barrel. These quality factors are what divide Beeman air rifles from other models and makes.
Seals and other parts are freely rotating and allow for smooth movement. Once again steel is used rather than sheet metal. These air rifles are designed with years of target practice in mind. The levers and chambers of Beeman air rifles allow for smooth loading of pellets and you can feel the lever glide over the chamber as the pellet goes into place. The difference for these is simply in how the are designed and the material that goes into making them. You cannot go wrong with a quality made unit like these.
Another important feature is the wood stocks and the lasting quality of Beeman. Your family and generations after can inherit these and they have a tendency to hold their weight in values and memories. Weather you are at the shooting gallery or out in the field plinking cans these are the ones to have slung over your shoulder or carried with confidence.

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Cool and functional air pistols

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Air Pistols that work for you

When you are at the range or in the field you learn alot about which air pistol works for you.
My experience with little pellet pistols for 20 dollars has been great. Most units for that much money are simple, fragile under ten yard plinkers. At best you can be comfortable learning to handle a pistol with this inexpensive air pistol. In the case of the ones I have listed here they are ones that have durability and provide hours of shooting pleasure.

(more...)

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Co2 rifles the canister versus the pump.

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

Co2 will out shoot a pump air rifle here is a good example

Let's start with CO2 power. CO2 rifle has a cartridge filled with CO2 inside it to provide the propellant for the pellet. You have to replace the cartridge when it empty's of CO2. An air rifle is one that uses ambient air for a propellant. Usually the air rifle will have a pump mechanism to pump ambient air into the rifle, where it is stored under pressure until the gun is fired.
My advice is to get the multi pump pneumatic like Benjamin 397 or 392 and it will shoot straight, it will shoot hard and it will last many years. I also as secondary enjoy using the versital break barrel air rifle. Because ambient air is reusable and once a CO2 tank is open it cannot be closed. And break barrel rifles are the most accurate and fastest, which penetrate well. I also recommend the gamo whisper, or any break barrel rifle made by Gamo. Daisy is suitable, depending upon what you will be using it for and under certain shooting conditions will work in a pinch.
Yes and no...CO2 rifles use a pre-charged cylinder, which is pressurized to a certain PSI. Air rifles on the other hand, use a manual pumping action to compress the air into an on-board chamber. To sum up...CO2 rifles can fire repeatedly, while air rifles require some time in between shots (to pump the gun, to build up the air pressure). That is the basic introduction and explains them in short terms.
Crossman.com and Beeman.com have pretty good sections on the different types of airguns. CO2 is compressed carbondioxide. its basically an airgun with pre charged cylinders. it can get expensive to shoot C02. Crossman makes good CO2 guns. archer airguns.com imports Chinese imitations and the qb78 is a pretty good copy.
Pros of CO2 is that they are pretty accurate;
cons(more...)

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