Originally Posted by
VALE BOY
My 302 was a fantastic rifle in .177, more powerful than a Meteor or Webley Falcon and extremely accurate. I regularly hit the small ceramic insulators on the telephone pole 40 yards from outside my front door and that was standing, using open sights. (I lived on the perimeter road of a council estate with a farm directly across the road about 100 yards away and open countryside for about 20 miles behind that!)
No hassles about shooting in the street back then, although a degree of discretion was still necessary.
By way of extreme accuracy testing I used to shoot at a telephone pole, easlily 150 yards away across the farmers field and I could hit that more often than not providing there was little or no wind. Admittedly I had no idea whereabouts on the pole was the point of impact but it was testimonial to the Haenel’s windage accuracy and also my shooting ability (says me modestly).
Back then in the late 60’s, Weihrauchs were virtually unknown in Scotland and Webley Mk3’s and Airsporters were pretty rare…none of them were owned by any of my contemporaries.
Slight o/t. The above takes me back. Somerset, early '70's. We used to shoot at the insulators on the poles on my friends farm - until his father got a visit from the electricity board! Our long range targets were the sides of galvanised cattle troughs. Don't think I had even heard of Haenel or Weihrauchs then. None of us owned an Airsporter or Mk 3. Meteors, Hawks, Dianas were what we had, & an ASI Paratrooper my mate 'borrowed' from his brother.
Bru
Webley Mk3 x2, Falcon & Junior rifles, HW35x2, AirSporter x2, Gold Star, Meteors x2, Diana 25. SMK B19, Webley Senior, Premier, Hurricane x 2, Tempest, Dan Wesson 8", Crosman 3576, Legends PO8.