Last edited by look no hands; 28-11-2024 at 08:42 AM.
Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in
Always looking for any cheap, interesting, knackered "project" guns. But not lathes. I have too many lathes. Thanks, JB.
Cometa!
Joking aside, expensive springers already exist, there is little incentive for anyone to compete.
Better to admit you walked through the wrong door than spend your life in the wrong room
This might seem strange, but of all the BSAs that I have ever owned or shot, the ones that impress me the most (mainly for the solidity of build and engineering) are my old Lincoln Jeffries underlever and the BSA Cadet. I accept the triggers may not be the best as they were conceived and built in a different era, but I love them for that solidity, simplicity and classic lines. To me it seems that they started to "cheapen them up" after the Cadet?
THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
NEXT EVENT :- July 19/20, 2025.........BOING!!
Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in
I really cant see it happening now as it never did!! Well since 77/80 era anyway.
AA make the best springers anyway, and unfortunately the market just isn't there for this product now.
VAYA CON DIOS
It's a good point, but I did say properly done lapped taps.
If done with precision it had mileage. The testimony of many Lincoln Jeffries shooters (incl myself) have witnessed superb accuracy but lacked the nice wood stock and scope grooves to realise much more than they did.
Agreeing the 70s Airsporters were all done by about 83 unable to compete. Hopeless.
I just feel if you could get this aspect right, you get a hell of a lot better looking gun for having the lever tucked away and the way HW are producing these truly yuk stock designs, it might stand a chance of some sales with the traditional styling and chequering if in some nice dark walnut.
Not really suggesting it would better the HW stuff, just provide something different..
Last edited by Brad3; 28-11-2024 at 06:06 PM.
Definitely agree with you on the solidity of the Cadet, Tony. Didn't someone bring one to the May bash? It sounded a little twangy (boing!) and you're right about the trigger, but nothing a little fettle couldn't sort out.
It was a really lovely little thing though, and felt so well put together. In fact I might have to look out for one, or maybe a Cadet Major.
Wyrd bið ful aræd
Great little guns once used on fair ground stands for donkeys years. Much better put together than a BSA Meteor which followed it.
Ultra slim .410 style stock is very appealing.
I once took a Rook down with one as a youth that was very high up in tree canopy.
Never made in .22 for some reason.
Ooooooooohhhhh christ. Don't revive the calibre argument
The only springer I would consider buying now is a pro sport and I'd never shoot it. I'd only buy it because of how pretty they are.
The one I have is spectacularly accurate. The one I sold back to you could put 25 pellets into a circle smaller than a ten pence piece at 50 yards in still air off a bench, using only a rudimentary scope and me yanking the trigger. It's a target rifle you can go hunting with.