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Thread: Airgun Myths and outrageous claims

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  1. #1
    keith66 is offline Optimisic Pessimist Fella
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Benfleet
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    5,971
    In the Shooting Times on the 28th October a reader asked for info on a Relum tornado he owned.
    John Knibbs replied & i quote "Unfortunately the company no longer supplies air rifles, it is a very well made & robust air rifle with a fixed barrel, a loading tap and is cocked by an underlever, it was only produced in .22 calibre and, when well maintained, is very powerful producing energy slightly under the british legal limit of 12ftlds".
    I couldnt resist posting it here

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Location
    Blackburn, Lancs. (under a bridge)
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    22,944
    Quote Originally Posted by keith66 View Post
    In the Shooting Times on the 28th October a reader asked for info on a Relum tornado he owned.
    John Knibbs replied & i quote "Unfortunately the company no longer supplies air rifles, it is a very well made & robust air rifle with a fixed barrel, a loading tap and is cocked by an underlever, it was only produced in .22 calibre and, when well maintained, is very powerful producing energy slightly under the british legal limit of 12ftlds".
    I couldnt resist posting it here
    I remember someone once boasting they could HIT a milk bottle using a Relum Tornado (aka The Hungarian Swamp Donkey - thanks H.S ).

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

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Waikanae Beach New Zealand (why-can-eye)
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    244
    Back in the 60s I decided to experiment with some rolls of caps as used in kid’s cap guns. I carefully cut out and glued some to the heads of some .22 air rifle pellets and yes they did go CRACK on impact. Then (I had just read an article in Guns and Ammo about a Daisy rifle that used compressed air to ignite an explosive compound behind a small slug) I tried sticking the cut out caps inside the pellet skirt. If memory serves me well the caps did ignite but I observed no obvious benefit to this and the powder residue made a (corrosive) mess in my Webley MKIII.
    When bored I was known to stick a second pellet head first in the muzzle of my MKIII and fire it in the air. The result was a noise not too dissimilar to a Hollywood ricochet.
    Oh the folly of youth.

    Barry

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    epsom surrey
    Posts
    254
    Yup, me too!
    Still got some old .22 pellets with a cap glued on them, and some rolls of caps.
    ( can you still buy caps? ) Great fun, especially when we were shooting at night. A good Webley Premier could 'lob' a pellet and awfully long way. Aim high and wait for the flash.
    You could, in the 30's I think, buy some ready made called 'BANGO' and there is a picture in Airguns and Airpistols by Lesley Wesley of one 'detonating on impact with a brick wall'.
    I was fortunate to live not too far from LW's shop in East Molesey and would hang about on the pretext of wanting to buy something but really it was just to soak up the atmosphere and hang about with the older boys.
    LW didn't suffer fools gladly but once he knew you had a genuine interest in the old stuff he could show off a bit.
    Imagine today shooting 1/2" lead balls from an antique pump up out the back of the shop into the old outside brick toilet at whatever target could be found of interest!
    Happy days.

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