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Thread: Who remembers the Brocock Fox ?

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  1. #1
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    Who remembers the Brocock Fox ?

    Had one of these in the 90's which I sold for £120. Made my own special pellets for it which it seemed to like and had a few nice rabbit stews from it. It was not like the other Brococks as it had no hammer mechanism, just a release button that pushed in the air valve from the pressure of your finger on the trigger.

    Baz

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  2. #2
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    Always wanted one of these......love the 'Day of the Jackel' concept. I have a couple of alros trailsman rifles which are pretty similar.

    Shame really, as you say the trigger mechanism only used pressure applied to the valve stem of the TAC and not a hammer spring, so I'm my opinion should have survived the ban as they wouldn't have been candidates for conversion in the same way as the others.

  3. #3
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    Never had one, did really want one back in the day.

    I did have an Ensign Royale, Saxby and Palmer Galaxy, two Heralds, and a Lee-Enfield No4.

    None of them was really any good.

    The Lee-Enfield was the least bad, because it was a real Lee-Enfield that you could shoot in your back garden. Which was

    When it worked.

    The cartridges would rattle around in the mag, then the "NATO" (sod all to do with the actual NATO) bullets would fall off the cartridges, then the thing would misfeed. Same with the Herald (and the weight of the empties was always going to overstress and eventually break the ejector on both conversions).

    The earlier Elite/Royale/Galaxy/Saturn was a better field proposition. But the cartridges were prone to leaking and inconsistent velocity, and the heavy striker powered by a big spring meant they were almost as hold-sensitive as a decent springer. And if you had it cocked and bumped the bolt handle on something, the bolt, propelled by the striker spring, would fly backwards at speed and take a chunk out of your strong hand. You learned quickly to keep the right thumb on top of the bolt handle.

  4. #4
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    Had one in .25. They were cool. Only problem, they couldn't hit a barn door.

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    Quote Originally Posted by ZAKDINGEL View Post
    Yes I remember them I also had one back in the day I miss it big style I have sent a few emails off to brocock asking them to reintroduce something similar I thought it can be redone with a air source in the but perhaps a bent air-tube? it was at the time brocock were going threw big changes so I think it fell on deaf ears? I also sent emails to other manufactures asking if they would or could bring out a takedown along the same lines as the fox was I think it would have some good sales especially if the price could be kept around or below £250 I did put the idea to Terry Doe form Airgun World if he could put the idea into the right place or ear to get this back into the market --perhaps one day fingers crossed
    I am thinking maybe something powered by 12g CO2 capsules. That could be fun, and hopefully not too expensive. The Chinese would probably have to make it.

    Quote Originally Posted by Muskett View Post
    Had one in .25. They were cool. Only problem, they couldn't hit a barn door.
    An inherent issue when each air cartridge introduces a whole new set of variables to the equation, including on consistency of charging from a manual pump, even when they weren't leaking.

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    I never knew the trigger just pushed the valve in, that's similar to the Harper Micro pistol then? I've been toying with making something similar for a while. Not with a TAC I hasten to add, just a one shot precharge tank that could screw into the barrel behind the already loaded pellet.
    God rest ye jelly mental men

  7. #7
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    One thing I would love to see is a rifle like the Spartan or PH Phoenix that uses a magazine (like a live firing rifle) and carts (like those used by the co2 copy peacemakers and alike). All the cart would be for is holding the pellet until the point the bolt is cycled and pushes the pellet through into the breech. Or even fire the pellet directly from the cart in the same vein as the co2 pistols, although I imagine this would be more inefficient. That would be pretty cool.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Geezer View Post
    I am thinking maybe something powered by 12g CO2 capsules. That could be fun, and hopefully not too expensive. The Chinese would probably have to make it.

    Only thing that might be a issue I have herd that co2 sometimes can be affected by the outside temperature ? will this not make it in-consent?
    An inherent issue when each air cartridge introduces a whole new set of variables to the equation, including on consistency of charging from a manual pump, even when they weren't leaking.
    That was a issue especially after dropping the tacs into a dusty coat pocket ---- if you kept them clean they shot perfect

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    Quote Originally Posted by Muskett View Post
    Had one in .25. They were cool. Only problem, they couldn't hit a barn door.
    Mine was quite accurate as I persevered in experimenting with different pellets and found the zinc heads with a bit of plastic tube which I made up myself gave good groups out to 30 yds, but had quite a drop after that. You can see a few in the pic of the rifle.These old rifles were far smaller and lighter than the Alros Trailsman.

    Baz
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  10. #10
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    The Brocock law change was such a crass piece of legislation, you can own the cartridges and pump but not the guns
    Custom BSA S10 .22 PAX Phoenix Mk 2 .22 Custom Titan Manitou .22 (JB BP) HW77 .22 FWB Sport Mk1 .22 Sharp Ace .22 Crossman 600 .22 Berretta 92 .20 Desert Eagle .177

  11. #11
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    I had the Saxby and Palmer Galaxy (or was it Ensign Elite ?), after some issues and it being returned, I went from using the plastic to ali cartridges. With careful pumping of the cartridge, I used Eley Waps in .22, mine was actually quite accurate

    I also had a fairly early Orion pistol (HW Orion ?) and again, with careful pumping I was surprised how accurate it was upto about 10 yards using hobby wadcutters

    All long since gone, I remember a .22lr type mag fed TAC rifle being talked then quietly dropped with ban looming

    I still four boxes of six TAC's I bought in .22 never used
    Custom BSA S10 .22 PAX Phoenix Mk 2 .22 Custom Titan Manitou .22 (JB BP) HW77 .22 FWB Sport Mk1 .22 Sharp Ace .22 Crossman 600 .22 Berretta 92 .20 Desert Eagle .177

  12. #12
    tinbum's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MartynB View Post
    I had the Saxby and Palmer Galaxy (or was it Ensign Elite ?), after some issues and it being returned, I went from using the plastic to ali cartridges. With careful pumping of the cartridge, I used Eley Waps in .22, mine was actually quite accurate

    I also had a fairly early Orion pistol (HW Orion ?) and again, with careful pumping I was surprised how accurate it was upto about 10 yards using hobby wadcutters

    All long since gone, I remember a .22lr type mag fed TAC rifle being talked then quietly dropped with ban looming

    I still four boxes of six TAC's I bought in .22 never used

    I have the 4" Specialist version of the Orion, and yes, it is a Weihrauch/Arminus revolver converted to TAC. Mine created quite a stir at the club, I don't think they'd seen anything quite like it before.

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  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by MartynB View Post
    I had the Saxby and Palmer Galaxy (or was it Ensign Elite ?), after some issues and it being returned, I went from using the plastic to ali cartridges. With careful pumping of the cartridge, I used Eley Waps in .22, mine was actually quite accurate

    I also had a fairly early Orion pistol (HW Orion ?) and again, with careful pumping I was surprised how accurate it was upto about 10 yards using hobby wadcutters

    All long since gone, I remember a .22lr type mag fed TAC rifle being talked then quietly dropped with ban looming

    I still four boxes of six TAC's I bought in .22 never used

    there was the Safari and Predator rifles



    Barrel Length 17.7"(45.0cm) Calibre: .22(5.5mm) Cartridge: BAC .38/.22
    Muzzle Velocity: 598ft/s(182m/s) Trigger: 2 stage adj. Capacity: Single shot
    Overall Length: 38.0"(96.5cm) Weight: 5.7lb(2.6kg)
    Finish: Blued steel, Beech or Walnut stock (telescopic sight & moderator not included)


    Barrel Length 17.7"(45.0cm) Calibre: .22(5.5mm) Cartridge: BAC .38/.22
    Muzzle Velocity: 598ft/s(182m/s) Trigger: 2 stage adj. Capacity: 6 shot
    Overall Length: 38.0"(96.5cm) Weight: 6.5lb(3.1kg)
    Finish: Blued steel, Beech or Walnut stock (telescopic sight & moderator not included)



    Barrel Length 14.7"(37.5cm) Calibre: .22(5.5mm) Cartridge: BAC .38/.22
    Muzzle Velocity: 598ft/s(182m/s) Trigger: Folding fixed Capacity: Single shot
    Overall Length: 31.0"(79cm) Weight: 2.65lb(1.2kg)
    Finish: Blued steel, Steel stock (4x32 telescopic sight included)


    Also a PPK



    Model: Para PPK 380
    Barrel Length: 3" (7.6cm)
    Calibre: .22(5.5mm)
    Cartridge: BAC Micro .380/.22
    Muzzle Velocity: 300ft/s(98m/s)
    Trigger: Double Action
    Capacity: 7 shot
    Overall Length: 6.7"(17cm)
    Weight: 1.45lb(0.66kg)
    Finish: Nickel, Walnut, Blued, Walnut & Black Composite


    More rifles here http://www.topham.org.uk/brocock/ubertipistols.htm

    http://www.topham.org.uk/brocock/brocockpistols.htm
    Last edited by bighit; 21-03-2018 at 12:56 PM.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Muskett View Post
    Had one in .25. They were cool. Only problem, they couldn't hit a barn door.
    Did you convert the barrel and TACs yourself ?

    Baz
    BE AN INDEPENDENT THINKER, DON'T FOLLOW THE CROWD

  15. #15
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    I like where you are going with this Tinbum (put my name down for serial number 0002)

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