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Thread: Morini 162ei

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2019
    Location
    DUSTON NORTHAMPTON
    Posts
    2

    Morini 162ei

    After having bought one of the above is it just me or are these pistols not what they are cracked up to be? I am used to shooting a waltherlp400, which is like going from a top class Mercedes to driving an old Vauxhall's viva! or have I just got a pistol that was made on a Friday afternoon after a bad week at the morrini factory,plus it has got barrell flip like you wouldn't,t believe. All views would be gratefully appreciated.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Rossendale and Formby
    Posts
    5,596
    Quote Originally Posted by Alex thomas View Post
    After having bought one of the above is it just me or are these pistols not what they are cracked up to be? I am used to shooting a waltherlp400, which is like going from a top class Mercedes to driving an old Vauxhall's viva! or have I just got a pistol that was made on a Friday afternoon after a bad week at the morrini factory,plus it has got barrell flip like you wouldn't,t believe. All views would be gratefully appreciated.
    Hi Alex,

    I have been shooting air pistols at 10 meters since 1971, and over these years I have been fortunate enough to enjoy and own just about all of the match pistols types you will see being used at the world's top air pistol championships and Olympic games - but sadly, owning the best does not make anyone the best shot and what suites one pistol shooter will not suite another.

    My own personal collection currently includes several good match air pistols including Steyr Evo 10, LP2, FWB P44, Morini 162ie, and Pardini K12, but I have also owned and enjoyed shooting the Benelli Kite, Walther LP200, Walther LP300XT, Steyr LP1, LP10, LP10e, LP2 Compact, FWB P34, P44 Compact - and just about every CO2 powered and SSP match pistol ever made - and I have enjoyed owning and shooting every one of them - not a dud amongst them - but they are all different !

    Every one of the above has its own characteristics that will appeal more to some than others, and every one of them has its own followers and supporters - and they are all more capable than most shooters ability to score a "possible" every time!

    I have owned several Morini 162ie match pistols over the years - some have been a lot older than others, and some are of the last few made with the cosmetic facelift (sometimes referred to as the 162ie Mk2) and they have all shot perfectly, and the same as each other.

    The Morini 162ie has been one of the air pistol world's best known success stories with what is probably the longest track record of success at International levels and the first choice of many of the world's best male and female pistol shooters - including our own most successful British pistol shooter Mick Gault who shot his with some success!

    The fore-runner of your Walther LP400 was the LP300XT and I always found this to be the most forgiving and easy match pistol to shoot. I am a dedicated Walther fan and choose to shoot Walther match rifles at 10 metres, but my preferred choice in pistols has been the Morini 162ie for several years.

    Having run several air weapons clubs and been a member of others too since 1971, I have been lucky enough to shoot and own a good choice of the world's best match air pistols and for sure the choice of air pistol is very personal thing - what suites one shooter may not suit another - but none of them are bad.

    If you are ever up north you would be welcome to visit our RMTC club and bring your Morini 162ie with you where you can shoot and compare it with several other Morini 162ie match pistols to see if indeed the one that you have bought is not as good as any of the others, but you could also take it to a fellow Morini shooter a little closer to your home and see if they think your particular 162 is inferior to theirs.

    Maybe somebody without enough knowledge has been "adjusting" your Morini?

    I bought an LP10 once that went off like a canon, had a kick like a mule, and felt capable of taking the bricks out the end of the club range. This did not make me think for one minute that all LP10 pistols had "muzzle flip" - when what had happened was that an amateur "twiddler" had adjusted the pistol's power incorrectly .

    Your Morini 162ie is a superb match pistol that in the right hands has surgical precision - if yours feels as bad as you say then it really needs "looking at" by somebody that is qualified to correct it for you.
    Last edited by zooma; 22-10-2019 at 09:48 AM.
    Rossendale Target Shooting Club. Every Tuesday and Thursday evening 7 - 10pm.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Norwich
    Posts
    377
    +1 To what Bob said, put it on a chrono to find out it's speed to see if a amateur twiddler has been playing with it and it is going too fast, then concentrate of follow through with a firm grip.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2017
    Location
    london
    Posts
    213
    I agree with Bob's comments. I started with a Morini 162ei and moved to a Walther LP400 carbon. Main reason was that I wanted a lighter pistol. I would say the LP400 is a 'deader' pistol to shoot compared to the Morini.

    What I did find with the Morini was that (and this is very subjective) its more unforgiving than the Walther, if I shot well I shot really well with it and vice versa.

    The electronic trigger has a very clean break compared to a mechanical trigger on the Walther, personally I prefer the mechanical trigger, as I can feel a tiny bit of creep before it breaks, but again very subjective.

    The Morini is also very robustly made and feels like it will last forever, I liked the interlock whereby the trigger is blocked when the air pressure drops too low. Also nice that it comes with two air cylinders.

    Iqbal Ubi is the UK Morini importer and can also service them too. Maybe worth having a chat with him, let me know and I'll email his details.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Location
    Blackburn, Lancs. (under a bridge)
    Posts
    22,944
    I agree with all the above (even what ZOOMA says - and thats a first ).

    You say you have just bought this pistol. Like Bob suggests - have you shot it over a chrono? If you dont know its history perhaps its over powered for a match pistol. A few minutes chrono testing may be beneficial.

    HTH
    Ian
    Founder & ex secretary of Rivington Riflemen.
    www.rivington-riflemen.uk

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Rossendale and Formby
    Posts
    5,596
    Quote Originally Posted by I. J. View Post
    I agree with all the above (even what ZOOMA says - and thats a first ).

    :

    HTH
    Ian

    I feel so privileged to have your personal endorsement .

    It must be mutual as I have always stood up for you Ian - even when they said you weren't fit to eat with pigs - I said you were !
    Rossendale Target Shooting Club. Every Tuesday and Thursday evening 7 - 10pm.

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