I have got all variants: various-wood-3piece, one-piece-beech, three-piece-beech and several all-walnut. None of them as stunning as some I've seen in this thread! great rifles non the less!
I have got all variants: various-wood-3piece, one-piece-beech, three-piece-beech and several all-walnut. None of them as stunning as some I've seen in this thread! great rifles non the less!
This is a mk1 Airsporter in .177" cal, I recall reading that the Club was .177" cal and was a bit shorter than the Airsporter on the cylinder and overall but this one is the same length as my other mk1 Airsporters so I'm not really sure what it is!
Someone offered an explanation as to what it was but my galloping senility is taking over so I forgotten!
John![]()
for my gunz guitarz and bonzai, see here
www.flickr.com/photos/8163995@N07/
The nicest Walnut stock I ever had was on an old Webley mk 3 .
I have a one-piece Sile stock made from walnut
I think you'll find that all MK1 and MK2 Airsporters had that little hole in order for the piston to draw air in.
As these guns had automatically opening taps the transfer port was closed off before the gun was fully cocked so without the little hole the piston created a vacuum.
Hi John,
I have a .177 the same as yours which is the same as a standard Mk1 Airsporter, but the Club etching is still just visible. As the other John has said only the early ones were shorter.
I got mine from my good friend Duomatic on here who I have known for many years, and he let me know when he was ready to let it go as I had mentioned I was looking for a Club a few years ago.
Definitely a real keeper for me. I could do with thinning my BSA's down but some things are like hens teeth, these are few and far between in my eyes.
BASC
For clarity the Club arrived first in a shorter cylinder form with 16 inch barrel. Then came another version with the extra long cylinder (which we know as the usual cylinder length for all Airsporters which followed)
Just to confuse things, a 16" barrel version went through a transition to the extra long cylinder but very rare.
It's a desirable version as it looks good for the barrel being 2" shorter but full length in cylinder and making the full power of the Airsporter. Short cylinder Clubs were miserable as the gun was produced in .177 which is already less efficient in Airsporter designs. I think they ran about 7.7 ..Cadet Major territory.
For completeness, the extra long cylinder Club in .177 ran an extra 1.5ftlbs as did Airsporters and then adding another 1ftlb for .22
The final S variant you could add another 1ftlb ....roughly.
I was just going to give details of my Mk 2 with a Sile stock and suddenly it's caused me some confusion, it's a one piece in walnut and I'd always seen it as a Mk 2 as it has the leaf sight and 2 groove scope rail but on checking the serial it says EF which should be Mk 3. A bitzer or transition? or do I know less than I thought I did?![]()
Steve
I've had Good deals & great info from many in this forum.
Afraid I have always found BSA Walnut stocks to be largely bland (probably just unlucky) and not a patch on the Mk3. But, the BSA rifle is a real piece of innovation (spliced stocks show that) and so a more 'industrial' stock would fit the marque. Pretty sure John Knibbs said that some Mk1s were mixed walnut and beech spliced together (Golden Century) but this thread shows the amazing variety of woods and flow of grain used.
A couple more pics of my Tiger striped Mk1, I noticed B'rider asked for more pics back in Covid days!!
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The metalwork..
John..
for my gunz guitarz and bonzai, see here
www.flickr.com/photos/8163995@N07/
Hi Steve,
The EF prefixed Airsporter is indeed a Mk2 (made between Jan 1966 and Jan 1968).
It differed slightly to the previous EE model in that scope dovetails were narrower at 11.5mm and longer. The 11.5mm dovetails were introduced on the Meteor first, then the Airsporter according to BSA circular from late 1965.
Kind regards,
John
Currently looking for Baikal Makarov pistols with the following prefixes to the serial number: 98, T01,
Prefer boxed or cased but will consider loose examples too.