I am a big fan of the dinky little Merlin -- not at all powerful (mine does about 3ft lbs) but great for back garden plinking and very pleasing to look at.
I see Woodys of Wembley have a Mk2 for sale with telescopic sight for £245.
I am a big fan of the dinky little Merlin -- not at all powerful (mine does about 3ft lbs) but great for back garden plinking and very pleasing to look at.
I see Woodys of Wembley have a Mk2 for sale with telescopic sight for £245.
The most disappointing BSA air-rifle ever. Was expecting a tiny Airsporter made to the same standard as the BSA Cadet, got a nasty stamped-metal thing with numerous design defects and no practical use whatsoever. Combines the worst aspects of American, Spanish and Chinese cheepos in one package, adding insult to injury by sporting the usually trustworthy BSA badge and a ludicrous price tag. Nuke from orbit, it's the only way to be sure.
The BSA Buccaneer is the junior rifle this thing was never. Provided your hands are size 7 or less.
Last edited by Hsing-ee; 02-07-2017 at 09:58 PM.
[QUOTE=Hsing-ee;7292624]The most disappointing BSA air-rifle ever. Was expecting a tiny Airsporter made to the same standard as the BSA Cadet, got a nasty stamped-metal thing with numerous design defects and no practical use whatsoever. Combines the worst aspects of American, Spanish and Chinese cheepos in one package, adding insult to injury by sporting the usually trustworthy BSA badge and a ludicrous price tag. Nuke from orbit, it's the only way to be sure.
So quite desirable then. Will tell my RFD who just bought it for £15. I may buy it as a curiosity as its the first one I have worked on. I am going to have to make the sliding mag from Delrin as everyone is out of stock. Silly making a small separate part like that for a kids rifle, bound to get lost.
Baz
BE AN INDEPENDENT THINKER, DON'T FOLLOW THE CROWD
Mine's not separate, or am I misinterpreting something?
Dave
Smell my cheese
BSA produced two pre WW1 air rifles for the younger shooter based on the Improved Mod D, being the 'Junior' and the 'Juvenile' Patterns. The 'Junior' was really just a cut-down version of the mid-length 'Light' Pattern, but the 'Juvenile' was purpose designed for this market.
I believe the dainty 'Juvenile' and 'Merlin, to be the only true examples of BSA air rifles specifically designed for young shooters. The 'Juvenile' would have been quite expensive when first marketed though, so it would have been a very lucky child who received one as a Christmas or Birthday present.
Regards
Brian
Do you need dimensions Baz?