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Thread: BSA Superstar, is it underrated or not?

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  1. #1
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    Had 2 superstars in the past. But rather my goldstars which is basicly the same gun but has a 10 shot magazine. But they are nice to shoot.

  2. #2
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    I have my superstar. Comes out a few times a year to use. It takes a while to learn to shoot it again but once you're there you'll be In love. It is definitely a keeper mine. I have no idea what people are on about being difficult to load or work on??? They're a doddle. Yes mine would benifit from a detwang but in all honesty it doesn't need it.

  3. #3
    look no hands's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by WILBA View Post
    Had 2 superstars in the past. But rather my goldstars which is basicly the same gun but has a 10 shot magazine. But they are nice to shoot.
    I bought and sold a .177 Goldstar a few years ago, the only thing that let it down where those damn BSA mags, even after being sent back to BSA for a service they still kept indexing wrong

    Pete
    Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in

  4. #4
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    Mmmm...As per PJ earlier posts, I bought two really nice 0.22 Superstars off him - absolutely love them, thank you PJ! I have six now, including a carbine version, all 0.22 except for one of the standard versions being 0.177. They are quality, lovely to shoot and safe to load. The maxi-scope rail can be a bit of a pain, but, I made a tool to assist. By the way, the foam(?) rubber cushions under the maxi-scope rail seem fairly expensive from T.C.C. for what they are, anyone sourced a sheet of similar material that will do the job? Need to have a look around.......

  5. #5
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    Cheers 'look no hands', your choice of subject matter wins a thumbs up from me!

    My first Superstar (.22 carbine) bought new in '92 at Rayleigh AGC + NS Gold Crown 4x40. I used it happily for 5yrs, including rabbits, though it took a back seat for a .22"LR bolt action rimmy on my then N.Yorks shoot.

    In '96 I fell for marketing hype and bought an early prod .22" Prosport from Uttings but had lots of bother...faulty trigger, snapped cocking lever pivot.

    I gifted the Superstar to a good mate, still has it 20yrs on. I shot it recently at his place in Lincs. Never serviced, in good nick at 11.3ft lbs with 'domes. He's mislaid open sights though.

    I've got a tidy MkI .177" + Bushmaster 4-12x40AO. After strip & relube, wasn't nice to shoot. J.Knibbs Titan XL spring guide + top hat, last week got it shooting really lovely, 11.5ft lbs 'domes <1/2" @ 40yds groups.

    Agreed, quirky design compared to AA & HW, but scope rail came off / on ok with wooden mallett, moly on rubber strips helped.

    If you don't need piston / breech block out, then rail can stay on, such as fitting Titan guides.

    Easily improvised a tool to push spring guide forward for cross pin removal.

    Lack of piston rod (sear engages on piston) + lack of sliding compression chamber (AA & HW) makes a lighter, faster handling underlever gun.

    Rotating breech block an excellent design, and being ally, also lightweight. No finger crusher open breech.

    Trigger smooth & light (mock 2-stage). Agreed, not Rekord or CD but not far behind.

    Stock wood to metal fit flawless, no gaps anywhere, metalwork finish very good. No play in underlever pivot joint. Everything tight, precise and well made.

    I don't usually go on here at length but I'm truly smitten with the Superstar.

  6. #6
    look no hands's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Roundshot View Post
    Cheers 'look no hands', your choice of subject matter wins a thumbs up from me!

    My first Superstar (.22 carbine) bought new in '92 at Rayleigh AGC + NS Gold Crown 4x40. I used it happily for 5yrs, including rabbits, though it took a back seat for a .22"LR bolt action rimmy on my then N.Yorks shoot.

    In '96 I fell for marketing hype and bought an early prod .22" Prosport from Uttings but had lots of bother...faulty trigger, snapped cocking lever pivot.

    I gifted the Superstar to a good mate, still has it 20yrs on. I shot it recently at his place in Lincs. Never serviced, in good nick at 11.3ft lbs with 'domes. He's mislaid open sights though.

    I've got a tidy MkI .177" + Bushmaster 4-12x40AO. After strip & relube, wasn't nice to shoot. J.Knibbs Titan XL spring guide + top hat, last week got it shooting really lovely, 11.5ft lbs 'domes <1/2" @ 40yds groups.

    Agreed, quirky design compared to AA & HW, but scope rail came off / on ok with wooden mallett, moly on rubber strips helped.

    If you don't need piston / breech block out, then rail can stay on, such as fitting Titan guides.

    Easily improvised a tool to push spring guide forward for cross pin removal.

    Lack of piston rod (sear engages on piston) + lack of sliding compression chamber (AA & HW) makes a lighter, faster handling underlever gun.

    Rotating breech block an excellent design, and being ally, also lightweight. No finger crusher open breech.

    Trigger smooth & light (mock 2-stage). Agreed, not Rekord or CD but not far behind.

    Stock wood to metal fit flawless, no gaps anywhere, metalwork finish very good. No play in underlever pivot joint. Everything tight, precise and well made.

    I don't usually go on here at length but I'm truly smitten with the Superstar.
    I see I've hit a good nerve with you on this one

    Pete
    Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in

  7. #7
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    Yes ! A nicely set up superstar is a very nice gun.
    The trigger never bothered me , neither did the rotary breech . I'd have another any time, may even climb over a goldstar to get to one.
    Rust never sleeps !

  8. #8
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    I agree with all the positive comments on this thread. The Superstar is impressive.

    For me, though, there's something I'm not keen on to do with the stock. In part that the fore-end feels too bulky to me. I would love to try one in a bit of contemporary CS walnut.

  9. #9
    look no hands's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Geezer View Post
    I agree with all the positive comments on this thread. The Superstar is impressive.

    For me, though, there's something I'm not keen on to do with the stock. In part that the fore-end feels too bulky to me. I would love to try one in a bit of contemporary CS walnut.
    I bought a .177 custom one a few years ago that had been tuned by Theoben, it had a CS thumbhole stock on it and a gasram fitted with a nice silencer and underlever catch combined but the damn thing was so inaccurate with every pellet I tried that I sold it in frustration.

    ete
    Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Geezer View Post
    I agree with all the positive comments on this thread. The Superstar is impressive.

    For me, though, there's something I'm not keen on to do with the stock. In part that the fore-end feels too bulky to me. I would love to try one in a bit of contemporary CS walnut.
    One of our keen 'Boinger Bash' adherents has just that baby. I hope 'flyingfish' will be along soon to crow about it. Pete, where are yoooooooooou???

  11. #11
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    I am sold on this, it does in fact look very nice....how much does a .177 version dell for? Does it have the dreaded scope problems of the Airsporter and Mercury?

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Roundshot View Post
    One of our keen 'Boinger Bash' adherents has just that baby. I hope 'flyingfish' will be along soon to crow about it. Pete, where are yoooooooooou???

    Yep, he got it from me, it was an absolute corker in a CS800 stock, I fitted an HW spring and guide set and it was shooting brilliantly at an enthusiastic level. Some spring trimming later it was just over 11 and as good as anything from the same era, better when you consider the brilliant rolling breech!
    I would have kept it, but I now have an embarrassing number of rifles and the clearout started at the end of October.
    My ignore list: ​<Hidden information>

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by SRV1 View Post
    Mmmm...As per PJ earlier posts, I bought two really nice 0.22 Superstars off him - absolutely love them, thank you PJ! I have six now, including a carbine version, all 0.22 except for one of the standard versions being 0.177. They are quality, lovely to shoot and safe to load. The maxi-scope rail can be a bit of a pain, but, I made a tool to assist. By the way, the foam(?) rubber cushions under the maxi-scope rail seem fairly expensive from T.C.C. for what they are, anyone sourced a sheet of similar material that will do the job? Need to have a look around.......
    Hope this helps 1.5mm rubber sheet cut to width foes the trick with some double sided sticky tape,I initially tried 2mm but that was too thick.
    ATB
    James

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by JB101 View Post
    Hope this helps 1.5mm rubber sheet cut to width foes the trick with some double sided sticky tape,I initially tried 2mm but that was too thick.
    ATB
    James
    Thank James for your suggestion....

  15. #15
    look no hands's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JB101 View Post
    Hope this helps 1.5mm rubber sheet cut to width foes the trick with some double sided sticky tape,I initially tried 2mm but that was too thick.
    ATB
    James
    Quote Originally Posted by SRV1 View Post
    Thank James for your suggestion....
    I've just ordered a sheet off of the bay of thieves, item no 262795115018 1.5mm x 150mm x 100mm for £2.50 (and you can get larger size sheets if you want), my Maxigrip is 150mm long so just need to cut it to the width needed, hopefully that will work as John Knibbs is charging £4.50 for two strips.

    Pete
    Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in

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