You should have bought a hw100. They only advance the magazine if you have shot the rifle so they won't put more than one pellet down the barrel
Well, second time since I've been using my R10 with multi-shot adapter, I forgot that I'd already cocked it!
Cocked it again and ended up with two pellets stuck in the barrel.
Whilst getting pissed with it trying to get the mag out I cocked it again!
Finally got the mag out ( mag lock undone and bolt pulled back, dunno why it just wouldn't come out) and popped a rod down the barrel and a nice string of pellets appeared at the breach.
Spent the rest of the day with the single shot adapter installed.
Also forgot to bring my paper targets with me, so made do with sheets of A4 and a biro.
Mark
You should have bought a hw100. They only advance the magazine if you have shot the rifle so they won't put more than one pellet down the barrel
FWB P8X,Hammerli AP40, Steyr LP1 Walther LPM-1, CPM-1, CP1, CP2, LP3, LP53, LP300, LP400, Terrus, Pardini P10, FX Wildcat .177, HW100 .22, AA S410 .22, BSA R10 MK2 .177, , HW77, 80, 90 BB AK47, S&W 586 and more blow back Co2 BBs than you can shake a stick at
I must be honest & say it concerns me that people can pay so little attention to what they're doing with a gun that they multi load it.
Either only cock it immediatly before shooting it, or everytime you cock it, and only when you cock it, apply the safetycatch & use that to tell you if it's already cocked.
Pleased to hear you managed to get it sorted. These things do happen to the small number of us on here who don't quite achieve perfection in everything we do
Whilst some compromises in design/function can be expected with lower cost multi-shot systems (such as the add-on mutishot kit for the AA s200) it is very frustrating that more of the modern "dedicated" multishot guns like the R10 don't have a built-in facility such as that on the HW100, to prevent double loading.
I make no claim to be perfect, but your dig would apper to indicate that you don't place firearms safety above everything when handling guns
Every multi shot I have ever owned could be multi loaded but strangely I have never once done so, presumably because being military trained I had safety awareness instilled from the start.
How hard can it be?
A couple of weeks back, I took 6 pellets out of an HW 100, and that wasn't the first one I've seen. If the cylinder isnt tight, it will multiload. It's also possible to jam the mag in backwards, it wont work, but I've seen it done. Coincedently, half an hour later, I did the same with a BSA..... Magazines are the invention of the devil..!
Gus
The ox is slow, but the earth is patient.
Worst one we got at the club was clearing 9 pellets out of a Brocock rifle barrel - which is pretty amazing, considering they only have a 6-shot mag!
I have also watched a guy with a multishot cock and load the rifle, and then rest the muzzle on his foot. When challenged he swore the rifle was unloaded and safe, Got the shock of his life when I asked him to point over the line and pull the trigger.
In a club environment there's no place for them: even with a rule to remove the mag before leaving the firing line there is still the doubt whether the rifle has been loaded or not before taking out the mag. I know of one club that bans multishot magazines altogether - single shot adapters only.
.
Jerry
Wouldn't work - Most springers could conceivably be 'checked clear'. But not PCPs, because the RO couldn't see if there was a pellet (or stack of pellets) seated in the barrel.
Also - Shooters are moving between firing points / joining or leaving the zeroing range - at arbitrary times.
Even 10M indoors isn't shot in 'details' AFAIK.
Multis - Realistically, one could only check if the mag' was in or out. And there is a 'mag out between lanes' rule.
Some single shot adapters are fixed, others are 'swing out'... To make all guns 'checkable' - Somebody would have to write a 'best practice' safety procedure for each and every rifle model & mag' / conversion.
Personally, I wouldn't use a gun for competition if I couldn't show it (relatively) clear - bolt open with red safety flag in the breech between lanes.
But that's because I came from SB and FB prone rifle shooting into FT.
So anyhoo, it is down to the shooter to 'know' himself (or herself), if he (or she) is clear.
For those who refuse to keep their bolt open (incase rain / grit / bad luck gets into the 'workings') - Pointing the gun down-range (not aiming it) and pulling the trigger just before 'getting up' is a pretty good 'last line' of defence. But it's not perfect (trigger could be 'sticky', safety catch could be on, etc etc...).
FWIW I think 'multis' are 10X more tricky / difficult to use than single-shot guns. Making them best in the hands of advanced users. Some can be 'de-cocked', some can't. They're always fiddly. And they're probably not ideal for outdoor competition use. IMHO.
I had a multishot which had to go back, as it wouldnt group properly. After a lot of investigation I established the magazine was not aligning properly with the breech and pellets were getting head damage when loading. I also managed the multi pellet shot but was aware of what I had done and was able to discharge it safely.
Single shot only for me from now on.....
Air arms HFT500, Prosport,
WH100SK Daystate Griffin