reply to post by semperfortis
I have shot many small cal. air guns and IMHO the single cocking guns are not a good accurate choice, unless the side cocking style is more accurate
than the break barrel ones..I think it comes from heat in the compression chamber.
I found on my RWS model48 that if I shoot it over and over waiting 30 seconds between shots its deadly accuarate, but....if you pick it up cold and
carry it hunting and have not shot it to warm it up the first shot or two seem to wonder off, 2-3 inchs.
So I had to make a choice, to site it in as a cold sighted one shot type style.
Sight it in over a few days shoot it once every 2 hours and make adjustments as needed for a single shot "cold" gun.
If you go with this method of sighhting your limited to losing accuracy if multiple shots are made.
Same thing with my Sheriden model 7 hits different point of aim if gun is required to hit for the 1st shot
My Anshutz does not seem to have this issue, but it is a side cocking lever, with a fixed barrel and weighs 12 lbs...RWS makes a comparable model 54
I think. Its not as heavy as the Anshutz.
But hands down I will take my all brass Bejamin pump up pnuematic, 6 pumps is around 800FPS I have a scope on it and birds squirrels and anything
within 50-60 yds is food on my table.
It was my fathers, and besides a new set of o-rings 5 years ago its never faulted in over 30 years.
The same gun, all brass, same specs and all is still sold to this day, the parts on my sons 2008 benjamin will interchange with my 1970's one.
I think that says a lot to still make the same gun for that long and change nothing...but thats just my opinion.
Don't fall for the big FPS guns either, do a little research on the grain of pellet and the FPS most pellets are between 7-9 grains "in the .177"
and overpowering them loses accuracy worse than anything IMHO.