So basically what you're saying is that a new British made springer will be doomed as the HW99 has already stolen the show BUT had AA or BSA (I won't say Webley as they were already gone before the 99 gained popularity) made a 99 spec rifle (without the gauling issue and a better stock) before HW did then it probably would be doing pretty well so far.
Pete
Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in
Then I can fully understand where you are coming from and why AA don't want to produce another break barrel, especially after the flop of the Pro Elite (I remember seeing adverts in the mags selling them off for £219 new towards the end of their production), BSA on the other hand could produce a better rifle (I think every body knows and wishes that) as they already have a Break barrel platform but they won't/can't improve upon it because of Gamo holding them back.
The annoying thing is, is that Walther (or may be Umarex) took the plunge a few years ago and invested heavily into R&D and produced the new LGV/U range and although it had a bit of a shaky start, it's obviously payed off as they've improved the range and they are still being made, the only problem is, is the things are too damn heavy and are not direct competition for the HW99 or even 95.
So it looks like although we won the war, the Germans are winning now
Pete
Last edited by look no hands; 02-05-2017 at 04:43 AM.
Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in
Which I will respectfully disagree with.
Of course, an experienced, well trained, careful user is fine with almost any safety device but:
- on the HW, you have to shift the whole hand to disengage the safety then move it back to a firing position; this is inefficient;
- the sequence should be see target, acquire target while disengaging safety, finger on trigger, shoot; anything that encourages the trigger finger to get in the guard earlier than required is not desirable for the general user - it encourages those people to wander around with their finger on the trigger.
I can thumb the safety off on my hw99s without moving my hand on the rifle. Same on my nephews hw80k. Depends on the size of your hands I would say.
And on My theoben EVO I flick the safety off just as I'm about to take a shot. Not take it off then aim and pull the trigger.
Aim - put finger in the trigger area -flick finger forward and safety is off - pull finger back to squeeze the trigger.
All your doing is flicking the finger one way then pulling it back. It's simple .
Last edited by bighit; 02-05-2017 at 09:33 PM.
I must have Trump-style small hands when it comes to HWs.
You prove my point on Theoben/Gamos. You are treating them correctly. My point is that others won't.
I had to get a wedding ring from America .my hands are fairly big. I used valve seats at the engine place I worked at to find the size I needed as the jeweller's ones were too small
I like the Theoben safety better than the Hw one.
The one on my anschutz .22 lr is on the side of the receiver and easy to thumb off but I'd prefer the Theoben type.
Saying that that . The Hw one would be difficult to use like I do if I was left handed I guess.
What Impact should have done was offer their new range of rifles in either gasram or spring (same as Theoben should have done), the problem I saw was Theoben seemed to have this stigma about them and their rifles (not helped by the unhelpful woman on the phone), which seemed to stick around after their demise and lingered around the Impact camp, Impact shouldn't have broken the £500 price barrier for the break barrels when they started back up (considering how many cheap sub £200 rifles there are now and HW having a firm hold on the break barrel market), I'm hoping the engineering and build quality was there (I've not seen an Impact rifle in the flesh) but so was the old "dyed in the wool" rumors of leaking rams with horrid triggers that killed scopes (which they didn't dispel), the only difference I could see was a new stock design, a little internal fettling and higher price tag, there was no attempt to try and design or retro fit a better trigger setup (which has always been a talking point and stumbling block with rammers).
I know people are going to say that Impact was aiming for the luxury/expensive end of the market but they had so many problems (lack of stocks etc) on start up, they should have offered a bespoke custom service, where you choose what your rifle should have on it (calibre, barrel length, stock, ram or spring etc) and that may have taken off but in today's climate it may not of, you can never tell.
Pete
Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in
Did Impact offer left handed stock options, I don't believe they did ?
“An airgun or two”………
What are Ripley up to these days?
HFT Team England 2012 - 2013
Incompetent writer for Airgunner
UKAHFT, World and SiHFT Recoiling champ 2017
They did offer left hand according to this
. So, at last, I can now go about assessing how the RM 100 stacks up against the competition.
Good Wood
The stock is manufactured in the UK from top-grade American walnut and features a well-defined and quite high right-hand roll over cheekpiece with a ventilated thick black rubber buttpad – there’s also a dedicated left-hand version available.
http://www.gunmart.net/gun-reviews/a...es/impact-guns
And from a US site
got a brochure... December 17 2014, 1:09 AM
a few months ago, here are the specs:
Price: 595 UK pounds (but perhaps minus UK VAT in USA)
12 ft/lbs
Calibre: .177, .20, 22 and, .25 in the RM100X (FAC)
Right Hand Walnut Stock (Left hand avail for 25 quid more)
14" Lothar Walther barrel
2 year warranty
length: 44"
weight: 8.1 lbs
trigger: Match Grade
Stock: Top Grade American Walnut
£25 extra for a lefthand stock.
Last edited by bighit; 03-05-2017 at 09:19 AM.
Top grade walnut
A man can always use more alcohol, tobacco and firearms.