Sorry, not an answer to your question, but I'm a ssp fan, how does it shoot, what kind of cocking effort?
Hello Chaps , can anyone tell me , Who invented the Wembley Paradigm . I have just got hold of a prototype.
Many thanks Shane
Sorry, not an answer to your question, but I'm a ssp fan, how does it shoot, what kind of cocking effort?
Its actualy very good . I have an airlogic Genissis to compare it against . Although at this stage i have not put them both through a crhono . I would say power wise the webley could be edgeing it . cocking effort is greatly redused on the webley with very good trigger and weighs less too .as for noise when shooting i have to say its the quitest gun iv shot .
Not sure who invented the webley one, but you see more parker hale dragons around workes the same .your jammey fiding a webley or as you call it wembley i only got close to one by watching this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJGKkL7vxy4
Thanks for helping . Sorry for spelling g mistakes suffering from blinding migraine at min lol .this gun has no serial number it just says handmade by then the guys initials . I can email photos to anyone interested.
Many thanks Shane
Are they by any chance .gt
Was the chaps name Graham Trimm? Didn't he produce the Black Fox PC1 also? You know, the one only it's mother could love
ls this the one that was going to be, then never was ?.
Yes that's the one Micky.
As seen here :-
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=pJGKkL7vxy4
If you look at the one in the video it has prototype engraved on it.
The last I read of the designer was on Network 54, saying how he'd been seen at Heathrow waiting on a plane to China --- so maybe we could see the Paradigm on the shelves one day, or maybe it was joke.
All the best Mick
no mine has hand made in 2009 by G,E ,T on it . apparentley it belonged to the designer .
I shot one of these at The Shooting Show (pretty certain it was there ... Newark, indoors) a few years ago and was generally very impressed ... I guess it was the prototype as they were not on sale. The cocking / charging action was not easy to begin with and there was a definite knack to getting the rifle, charging lever and your arms in the correct positions to make efficient energy transfer. Out of about 10 shots I remember 'getting it right' twice, when the effort was not too bad. The other shots saw me twisting and turning to get the lever to close. But with more practice I reckon it could be mastered.
Pity it never materialised really.
Cheers, Phil