Posts Tagged ‘Airguns’

The Metisse rifle from Milbro incorporates a lifetime our airgun wisdom from Ben Taylor. That's a Huggett moderator on the end.

The Metisse rifle from Milbro incorporates a lifetime our airgun wisdom from Ben Taylor. That’s a Huggett moderator on the end.

The Metisse rifle came to market in the summer of 2012, and all of the initial run of product has been sold. Ben Taylor is the brains behind its design.

 

Ben Taylor doing what he does best -- designing airguns.

Ben Taylor doing what he does best — designing airguns.

JE: What sets the Metisse apart of other air rifles?

BT: There are a lot of things that are special about the Metisse – a smooth twist barrel, a miniature version of my regulator, a received machined from a solid billet of aircraft aluminum, and several key components machine out of solid titanium.

But the key thing that sets the Metisse apart from other air rifles is its efficiency. The Metisse delivers 50-60 30-foot-pound shots from a 180cc air reservoir. Most conventional air rifles would require an air reservoir nearly twice that size to deliver that number of shots at 30 foot-pounds.

JE: How do you achieve that?

BT: The secret is in the patented coaxial valve design. It puts everything – the valve, the hammer, the spring – in a straight line behind the pellet. In a conventional precharged pneumatic, the valve is under the barrel, and the air has to go through two right angle bends – rushing down a tube and slamming into a wall and then rushing down a tube and slamming into another wall — in order to reach the pellet. A lot of energy is lost in making those turns, and what the coaxial valve – which is machined out of titanium nitride – does is to get rid of the energy loss.

JE: Was it difficult to develop?

BT: It was very difficult, because nothing is the same as in other airguns. In fact, the very first prototype that we built produced a whopping three foot-pounds of energy! A lot of subtle tweaking was required, but we went almost immediately from three to 30 foot-pounds.

Andrew Huggett takes Ben's ideas and "turns them into art."

Andrew Huggett takes Ben’s ideas and “turns them into art.”

JE: That’s impressive.

BT: We’re very proud of the Metisse. It shows what can be done with an air rifle and sophisticated engineering. I owe a great deal to Andrew Huggett. He took my ideas and turned them into works of art. This is not a mass production gun; it’s more of a tool-room gun. The first run sold out completely, and we’ll be making more next year. We’re keeping the energy at 30 foot-pounds because that’s where the accuracy is.

JE: Is there anything else that readers of the AoA blog ought to know?

BT: Well, I’ll make a prediction. I think other tuners will attempt to tune the Metisse action, and it won’t work. In fact, it will stop working instantly.

JE: Has that happened already?

BT: We had one fellow who called us and said his rifle had stopped working. We asked if he had been messing around inside of it. He said, “No, I only took off the side plate to look at the trigger mechanism.” He sent it to us, and when I looked inside, I found that someone had taken the guts out of the gun and then reassembled it but not in the right order. Everything is balanced inside the Metisse for efficiency. You can’t go mucking about hoping to make things “better,” because, most assuredly you won’t.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

 

What do these gentlemen have in common? Excellence in airguns.

It all started innocently enough. Greg Glover, my main contact at www.airgunsofarizona.com, called to brief me on the results of the Extreme Benchrest competition. It had gone extremely well, he said. Lot of airgun industry folks had been in attendance, among them Ross Marshall, Ben Taylor, and Andrew Huggett of Milbro. The trio were up to some interesting stuff in the wilds of England and maybe I would like contact them and see if they were willing to grant an interview.

I reached out to Ross Marshall and pretty quick we had a teleconference scheduled. But before we get to the gist of the conversation, you need a bit of background.

Milbro, it turns out, has been making airgun pellets for over 50 years. About four years ago, the owner of Milbro was about ready to hang up his spurs and call it day, allowing Milbro simply to fade away, when David Little, who runs Kynamco, heard about it. Kynamco make Kynoch Nitro Express Cartridges for big game rifles. These are cartridges the size of elephant suppositories, cartridges that throw ounces of lead, the kind of cartridge you want in the chamber when an angry cape buffalo comes charging out of the tall grass with murder on its mind.

Ross Marshall is the general manager of Milbro.

So Little decided that the airgun business had “lots of spritelyness in it,” acquired Milbro, and asked Ross Marshall, who was working at Kynamco, to run it as General Manager. Here begins our interview.

JE:  How was it that Ben Taylor got involved?

RM: It was a combination of factors. The first is that Milbro basically sells to wholesalers. We have about a dozen major customers who buy pellets by the palletload, so that part of the business is relatively low maintenance although we are developing and bringing to market some new pellets. The second is that Ben Taylor – the “Ben” part of Theoben air rifles – had sold up his part of the business and moved on.

He was running his own business out of place in Cambridge (about half an hour from the Milbro facility). We have an underground 100 meter range which is great for testing, and Ben would come over for testing when he was working on his smooth twist barrels, and he and David Little would get to talking. At the same time, Ben’s facility was broken into several times, so eventually we said, “Come work with us and do stuff,” so he did.

JE: What happened next?

RM: Ben had an idea to make an air rifle that incorporated everything that he had learned as an airgun designer, and that gun became the Metisse.

Ross Marshall refers to Ben Taylor (left) and Andrew Huggett as “the two geniuses.”

JE: (In Part II of these series, I’ll be talking with Ben Taylor about the Metisse.) What else?

RM: Andrew Huggett came along with Ben as a supplier to us. Ben had been selling Andrew’s moderators, and they truly are remarkable. Andrew is a CNC engineer and an airgun enthusiast. We believe that he has created the best silencer in the world. What makes it so special is the combination of the design, the quality of the build, and the efficiency of what it does. When we first tested a Huggett moderator, we put it on a Brocock rifle and literally the only thing you could hear was the action cycling.

Quite frankly, it comes in a very high price point, but the shooters just love the Huggett mods, and the engineering that goes into them is just top rate. I was at a trade show in Europe, and there was a fellow who kept quizzing about the technical aspects of the Huggett mod. I got a little frustrated with him, screwed the end off the moderator, and said, “Just take a look inside.” He did, said something like “wow,” and bought two of them!

Next time, we’ll talk to Ben Taylor about the new Metisse rifle.

Til then, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

The FX Royale 400 Field Target with benchrest plate shown below.

My experience to date with FX air rifles is that they are wickedly accurate. I cannot remember shooting one that was of merely average accuracy. As a general rule of thumb, you can figure that virtually any FX rifle with the right pellet under decent condition will put 5 shots in a one-inch group at 50 yards. In my mind, it has gotten to the point where I sometimes wonder if I really need to test an FX rifle for accuracy because they are so darn consistent.

Yet, despite FX’s richly deserved reputation for producing accurate air rifles, there have been those of you in the airgunning community who have requested that FX produce a full-out competition air rifle.

The flip side of the FX FT.

The FX Royale Field Target series of rifles is the answer to that request. The FX FT series is designed for bench rest and field target competition and is available in three variations: the Royale 200, available in .177 and .22; the Royale 400, also available in .177 and .22; and the Royale 500, available only in .25. The number after “Royale” tells you the capacity, in CCs, of the air reservoir. All models weigh right around 10 lbs. (some a bit heavier, some a bit less) before a scope and mounts are added. The overall length of an FX FT ranges from a bit over 41 inches to around 48 inches, depending upon the model, the caliber, and how the stock has been adjusted.

The butt stock and cheek piece of the FX FT are readily adjustable.

All of the FX FT models have a number of common features. Chief among these is a fully adjustable alloy stock with adjustable grip, cheek piece, length of pull, and butt pad. Basically, these guns are designed so that you can tweak the ergonomics so that you can feel completely comfortable, whether you are shooting field target or bench rest. In addition, each of these air rifles includes a precision air regulator that keeps the velocity of the pellets extremely consistent from shot to shot. Each Royale FT also features a multi-shot magazine that is self-indexing, a three-position power wheel, a pressure gauge and highly effective sound moderator. Finally, each FX FT includes a match trigger that can be highly adjusted to the shooter’s preference, all the way down to a few ounces.

The model that I tested was the FX Royale 400 Field Target in .22 caliber and was fresh from the Extreme Benchrest competition. It was fitted with a Hawke 8.5-25 sidewheel scope, and the entire rig was impressive. I don’t think the fit and finish could be improved upon, and the whole thing felt incredibly solid, as if it had been machined out of a solid block of metal.

The moderator is highly effective.

It launched 15.9 gr. JSB pellets at an average of 928.5 fps, and the report was remarkably subdued for an air rifle that was making slightly over 30 foot-pounds of energy. It makes a kind of “fap” noise that doesn’t sound at all like a shot and should not annoy the neighbors.

Included with the rifle was a machine rectangle of metal that could be attached to the front rail for benchrest shooting, but I didn’t mess with that. Instead, I laid the forestock in the crease of my Caldwell Tackdriver bag and started launching some pellets. At 13 yards, the results were predicable: a tiny group, but what really surprised me was that, at 33 yards, the FX FT would usually put three out of five 18-grain JSB pellets through the same hole! I tried a couple of times to pull off a 33-yard, 5-shot, one-hole group, but I couldn’t quite manage it. Either I would yank a shot ever so slightly or the wind would kick up (I was shooting in early December), and the group was “ruined.”

I really enjoyed shooting the FX FT. I think it would be a lot of fun to shoot in competition, and I also think it would be a delight to shoot as a long-range varminter.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

It’s one of my favorite times of year, the time when many of us celebrate our faith and peace on earth, good will toward men.

Here at El Rancho Elliott, we celebrate Christmas, but whatever you celebrate, I wish that you do it with love, good wishes, and the gracious company of the people you care about.

I wish you receive a really great airgun-related present. Maybe it’s as simple as a tin of your favorite pellets or perhaps something as grand as a fancy new airgun. But whatever it is, I hope you enjoy it in good health and safety.

I hope you are smart about your airgunning. . . that you will not shoot at resilient spherical objects (because the pellets will ricochet right back at you), that you – and everyone at the firing line – will wear eye protection, that you will always keep your airgun pointed in a safe direction, and that you will not be so foolish as to take brand-new airguns apart. (If there is a problem, let the warranty handle it. If there isn’t a problem, leave it alone!)

Further, I wish that you will be generous with your time. Introduce someone to the joy of shooting sports or take the time to help an airgunning “newbie” through some of the issues that first-timers seem to suffer. If you enjoy an abundance of airguns, you might even consider donating an airgun to a youth shooting program.

For the sake of all of us in the sport of airgunning, I hope that you will be smart about how you deal with your neighbors. If you have a new neighbor, take the time to introduce yourself. Let them know that you are an airgunner, but cordially reassure them that you are as concerned about safety as they are, and they have nothing to fear from your airgunning. You might even invite them to shoot with you, if that seems like a good idea.

If you participate in online forums about airgunning, my wish for you is that you – and everyone you deal with – will be extra courteous. Whenever possible, give the other fellow the benefit of the doubt, and respond with good will. Remember that what appears to be a harsh word may not have been intended that way.

Enjoy the season, your friends, your families, and your airguns.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

Last time I suggested that if you really want to put a grin on someone’s face this holiday season, you might want to make them the gift of an air rifle, combined with the gift of your time shooting with them.

The excellent Daisy Avanti 747 pistol.

But for some folks, an air pistol might be a better choice. If you want an air pistol that is suitable for casual plinking and backyard shooting yet could be used for silhouette competition or club-level ten-meter competition, the Daisy Avanti 747 is an excellent choice. It is a single-stroke pneumatic that is completely self-contained, is easy to cock and shoot, make a mild “pop” when it goes off, has virtually no recoil, and is wickedly accurate with the right pellet. The 747 is so mild-mannered that it probably could be shot in an apartment with a silent pellet trap and a little covering music. About the only thing that the 747 is not good for is pest control. It is simply too low powered to be used for humane pest control.

The CO2-powered Crosman 2300S has excellent sights.

If you want an air pistol that doesn’t even require a cocking stroke, consider the CO2-powered Crosman 2300S. It has a Lothar-Walther choked match barrel and meets IHMSA rules for “production class” silhouette competition. It uses 12-gram CO2 cartridges but delivers around 60 shots per cartridge. This pistol features a Williams rear notch sight with target knobs for easy adjustment and is extremely accurate with the right pellet. I would not recommend the 2300S for pest control, except for very small pests at close range.

An LP8 pistol equipped with an optional red dot sight.

If you want an air pistol that recoils, there are two really good choices that immediately come to mind. The RWS LP8 is a break-barrel springer pistol that can be readily fitted with a red dot, and is powerful enough for defending the bird feeder at close range.

An HW45 in the Black Star configuration.

Any of the HW45 series of pistols are also excellent. They are slightly more difficult to fit with a red dot, but they are extremely well made and deliver enough power for pest control at close range. I have personally terminated a squirrel using a .177 HW45, and I have heard stories of folks killing much possum-sized game with an HW45 at close range.

One of the interesting things about the HW45 is that the piston works backwards. A pistol like the RWS LP8 is like a scaled down breakbarrel rifle. You crank the barrel down to cock the gun, and you’re driving the piston and spring back, toward the palm of your shooting hand. When you trigger the shot, the spring and piston rocket forward, just like a break barrel rifle.

But cocking the HW45 is totally different. You pull back the ‘hammer’ to release the rear of the upper, and then you pull the rear part of the upper up and forward to cock the pistol. While you’re doing that, you’re actually dragging the spring and piston toward the muzzle of the pistol until they latch. When you trigger the shot, the spring and piston leap toward your hand. The shot cycle feels different than the LP8, but both the LP8 and HW45 are a lot of fun to shoot, and I have spoken to several airgunners who really enjoy the challenge of learning to shoot these spring-piston air pistols well.

With any of these air pistols, you’ll likely need a pellet trap, a selection of pellets, some eye protection, and perhaps a red dot sight. Ask the good folks at www.airgunsofarizona.com, and they’ll fix you up with what you need.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

It’s that time of year again when one of the cable stations will run a 24-hour-marathon of A Christmas Story, that great movie based on the writings of Jean Shepherd, in which all that Ralph Parker, a nine-year-old boy, wants for Christmas is a Daisy Red Ryder BB gun.

That film really resonates with me, on a couple of different levels. One is the way I received my first BB gun was just like in the movie. For months I had been lobbying my parents to receive a BB gun for Christmas. Finally, the day had arrived. I was sitting in the living room with my Dad and Mom. The opening of presents was over, and I was disappointed. I hadn’t gotten my BB gun. But, just like in the movie, my Dad said, “Wait a minute, there’s another present over there.” And he pulled a long, slim box from behind the couch. In it was my first Daisy.

Second, there is a line at the very end of the movie that strikes a chord with me: Next to me in the blackness lay my oiled steel beauty, the greatest Christmas gift I had ever received or would ever receive . . .”

In many ways, I think many of the experiences I have had with airguns have been an attempt to recreate the joy that I felt on receiving that first BB gun. In part, it was a rite of passage. My folks were saying to me, in essence: “You’re grown up enough that we trust you with the responsibility of a gun. Used improperly, it can hurt creatures and break things. Used rightly, it will produce joy and satisfaction. Welcome to the beginning of adulthood.”

In addition, receiving that BB gun was the beginning of many happy hours for me and my Dad shooting together.

So I would like to make a most proposal: if you would like to put a huge grin on someone’s face this Christmas, why not give them an air rifle combined with the gift of your time shooting with them?

HW30 Deluxe tricked out with optional peep sight.

If you roam around www.airgunsofarizona.com, you’ll see a lot of excellent air rifles, any one of which would make a suitable present. But if I had to choose just one that would be appropriate for a beginning shooter or a seasoned airgunner, it would be an HW30. The HW30 is light, easy to cock, fully self-contained, a delight to shoot, nicely accurate and capable of taking small game out to about 30 yards or so with proper shot placement. It’s an air rifle that is kind to newbie shooters, yet an old hand will happily shoot one all day.

The HW30 is good enough that both my brother-in-law and I have shot field target with the HW30 and done reasonably well. When a ham radio buddy, frustrated by the difficulty of shooting a higher power air rifle he had purchased, asked for a recommendation for controlling squirrels in his yard, I pointed him straight at the HW30. In a later conversation, he raved about what a great choice it was.

If you want more information, you can read my review of the HW30 De Luxe here: http://198.154.244.69/blog/2010/09/hw30s-de-luxe.html

Of course, with the HW30, you’ll want a pellet trap, a selection of pellets, some eye protection, and perhaps a scope or peep sight to go with it. Ask the good folks at www.airgunsofarizona.com, and they’ll fix you up with what you need.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

Years ago, your humble correspondent wrote for a number of radio related publications. As a shortwave listening enthusiast, I would often tune in to the BBC news service beamed to North America. At the end their broadcasts, the BBC news readers (as the Beeb called them) would often launch into a reiteration of the headlines with the following phrase: “And now, the main points once again.”

Well, this is one of those “main points once again” moments. As we roll into the holiday gift-giving season, I know that some of your reading this blog will receive an air rifle or air pistol as a present. Others know family members who will receive an airgun. Still others know family members who will be making a present of an airgun to an adult or a youngster. Given that, and recognizing that some of the people who are receiving the gift of an airgun will be handling a gun for the first time, it seems high time to review the main points of airgun safety.

Let’s start with the basics: any air rifle or air pistol has the potential to destroy property, injure people or animals, or even cause death if handled improperly. Note that well: if handled improperly. Got that? Good!

Now, because the readers of this blog are pretty smart folks, I bet you are inquiring: “So what is proper handling of an airgun?”

I’m glad you asked. Proper handling of an airgun consists of two parts. Part one: know where the muzzle of the airgun is pointing at all – repeat ALL – times. Any time the airgun is in your hands or in your control (such as when you have taken it out of its storage place and you have set it down for a moment), you need to know – not guess, but know with certainty – where it is pointing.

Part two of proper airgun handling is this: never, ever, point an airgun at anything you don’t want to see broken or destroyed. I am dead serious about this; don’t point your airgun at another person or animal or property for even an instant (unless, of course, if you are hunting). If you don’t want to see a hole in it, don’t point at it, it’s just that simple. Why am I going on like a maniac about this? Because an airgun can only shoot where it is pointed. Put another way, the secret of airgun safety is to make sure that it is always pointed in a safe direction including when you are taking aim at a target.

Now, I’m sure that my sharp-eyed readers will have realized by now that making sure your gun is pointed in a safe direction at all times places a special burden on parents, because as youngsters are learning to shoot, whether it is a BB gun or a pellet gun, they need to be supervised. From a practical standpoint this means that parents must be close enough to redirect the muzzle of the gun to a safe direction if that becomes necessary. It’s no good watching the kids play with the BB gun through the kitchen window; parents have to be close enough to take control of the gun if it is pointed in an unsafe direction.

Every airgun manufacturer I can think of packs useful information in with their guns. Take the time to read it. Make sure that you have a safe backstop on your shooting range. Be certain that everyone on the firing line is wearing eye protection. Don’t shoot BBs against hard targets, they will ricochet.

For some addition thoughts on airgun safety, check this out: http://198.154.244.69/blog/2011/11/that-safety-thing-again.html

My wish for you is that your Holidays are safe, that Santa brings you something wonderful, and that you can spend many happy hours enjoying airgunning with folks you love.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

Wives . . . you gotta look out for them, ‘cause sometimes they will nail you with an insight that is just cosmic in its significance.

Here’s what happened, I was wandering through the house this am when I noticed the book my wife was reading. About two-thirds of the way down the front cover was a cloverleaf which, in this case, was a symbol for the Holy Trinity. For me, though, it brought something else to mind.

“You know,” I said, “just the other day when I was visiting with the airgun benchrest folks, I shot Todd Banks’ air rifle and produced a group just like that – a little tiny cloverleaf. It’s a really, really (I could have added a couple of more reallys) accurate gun.”

“Okay,” she said, “but weren’t you telling someone a story today about a day when you shot two air rifles, got the same crummy results, and concluded that you were the problem?”

“Yeah, so?”

“Well, how do you know that you weren’t shooting extra good when you got that cloverleaf? How do you know if it’s you or the gun?” she asked.

All I could say was: “Wow, sweetie, that is a darn good question . . . a DARN good question . . . how DO you know if it is you or the gun?”

So, in this blog I am going to attempt to make some progress on answering that question, but bear in mind that I don’t claim to have all the answers. So if any of the good readers of this blog have their own methods of sorting out whether it is you or the gun, you are cordially invited to post in the comments section of this blog.

From a theoretical standpoint, I think there are two key concepts in figuring out whether it’s you or the gun: (1) look for common factors and (2) eliminate variables.

Look for common factors. The day on which I shot two guns and got crummy results with both is a classic example of spotting the common factor. I was shooting a springer in the side yard and could not get it to group better than 1.5 inches at 20 yards. I stormed into the house, muttering darkly under my breath: “those darned springers are soooo difficult to shoot well . . .” I then grabbed a precharged rifle which I knew was a tack-driving sonofagun, shot it at 20 yards, and got nearly identical results. What’s the common factor here? The guy behind the trigger.

But if you shoot two different guns and get a good result with one gun and a bad result with the other, that doesn’t necessarily mean that you are not the cause of the bad result. I had a perfect example of that a few years back at a field target match. One of the fellows was shooting Hunter Division with a springer, and he beat me, fair and square, with a tuned springer. Afterwards, I asked if I could try his gun. I tried six times to drop a large target at close range and failed miserably, so much so that he thought maybe something had broken in his scope. He took the gun from me and promptly dropped the target. The problem was that I wasn’t holding his springer the way that he did. If I wanted to shoot his gun, I would probably have to re-zero it.

Here are some common factors you might look for: are you using the same scope on both guns? (A bad scope can really screw things up.) Are you shooting in conditions that are not typical of what you usually shoot in? (Wind from an unusual direction, even if it isn’t particularly strong, can wreak havoc with accuracy, just ask the benchrest shooters.) Are you using a particular tin of pellets with both guns? (Recently I talked with a shooter who has two “identical” tins of pellets – one shoots true, and the other habitually spirals the shot, and nobody can figure out why.) Have you recently changed your rests or shooting position? (That can mess things up in subtle ways. If you just changed rests and suddenly can’t shoot for beans, try reverting to your old rests and see if that doesn’t cure the problem.) Common factors will, in general, affect all guns that they touch. If it turns out that the common factor is simply that you are having a bad day, there’s hope that on another day things will be better.

The other thing that you have to do if you’re trying to figure out if it is you or the gun is to eliminate variables. With springers, in particular, you have to make sure that your scope mounts and stocks screws are snug. If any of those screws are loose, weird, erratic stuff can happen that can really affect accuracy. It should go without saying that, having made sure that none of the fasteners are rattling, you should test for best pellet by shooting groups off a rest. With precharged pneumatic airguns, make sure that you are charging to the correct pressure for that particular gun. If you are using a scope with a mil-dot reticle or any other reticle with multiple aiming points, make sure that you use those aiming points at the same power every time. If all else fails, try cleaning the barrel.

Every airgun sold by www.airgunsofarizona.com comes with a small pamphlet that I wrote on airgun maintenance. If you ask nicely, I bet they will send you a copy. The tips in there should prove pretty useful.

Okay, now, dear reader, it’s your turn: how do you tell if it is you or the gun?

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

On July 6, 7, and 8, I spent three days in Bloomfield, NY, at the Crosman facilities attending the Northeast Regional Field Target Championship, and I thought I share some of my thoughts, photos, and impressions of the experience. (If you simply want to see the results, you can check them out here: http://www.crosman.com/croswords/?p=2704 )

The shooter’s meeting under the large tent.

To start, the match was incredibly well run and organized. It was as if Crosman were conducting a clinic on how to host a field target match. Red shirts, worn by Crosman folks, were in evidence everywhere, helping out, making sure things went well. And they did. The Regional Field Target Match was scheduled to start at 9 am Saturday morning, and by 8:50 am, everything was in place and ready to go.

By the time I arrived shortly after noon on Friday, a number of shooters were already on the sight-in range. It was very warm and humid, and the Crosman folks had large coolers filled with ice and bottled water available next to the sight-in range and also under a large tent where shooters could escape from the sun. By the end of the day on Friday, there was a 55-gallon drum filled with empty water bottles.

The two field target courses were about 1/3 of a mile apart. Many shooters drove from one to another, but Crosman also had an ATV and trailer for transportation between the two courses.

Almost every type of field target rig imaginable was in evidence, from Remington Nitro-Piston break barrel rifles being shot off shooting sticks to multi-kilobuck full race match rifles.

Hans Apelles’ rig featured a very tall scope mount.

Hans Apelles was shooting in Hunter Division with a very tall scope mount. When I asked about it, he pointed to his son, Ray. Ray explained, “Dad’s shooting in Hunter. Scopes are limited to 12x. That makes it hard to range-find beyond 35 yards. With this setup, everything from 33 to 55 yards is basically the same mil-dot.”

Here’s what Hans’ mil-dot chart looked like.

When I spoke to Kevin Yee, who had flown in from California to shoot in the Open Division, Piston Class, he complained that he wasn’t doing so well, but he posted a 50 out of a possible 60 on both days and beat the highest score in Open PCP.

Kevin Yee has, easily, the world’s funkiest sidewheel scope knob. It’s built that was so he can adjust it with his trigger hand while shooting offhand.

 

Larry Bowne shot the entire match offhand.

The match on Saturday was interrupted by a spectacular but short-lived storm.

Dan Finney shot prone most of the time in Hunter PCP.

Ray Apelles designed the championship courses with 1.5 inch killzones throughout, but no one cleaned the course.

In the middle of the WFTF shoot-off for first place, Greg Sauve grins for the camera while Ray Apelles focuses on a shot.

The pistol match featured almost every imaginable style of pistol shooter.

The B course (lanes 16-30) was cooler under the trees, but all shooters agreed that it was harder to dope the wind there.

Hector Medina (white hat with neck cloth) won Hunter Piston by nearly 20 points. That’s Art Deuel shooting an HW98 in the foreground.

Richard Bassett (tan hat) is congratulated by Hans Apelles for winning the Quigley Bucket Challenge. Over 40 shooters took a crack at the 1.75 inch bucket at 55 yards with non-glass sights.

Dan Brown not only took third in WFTF and won Hunter Pistol, but gets the “Nice Guy of the Year” award for providing much needed navigational help to Your Humble Blogger.

In all it was a wonderful match!

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

– Jock Elliott

The AoA Tactical Case, an excellent choice for protecting your precious.

I am a huge Lord of the Rings (LOTR) fan. I read the books years ago, and I have the extended Collectors Edition of each movie. LOTR is a story and a mythical world that really appeals to me. My wife thinks that I would prefer to live in Middle Earth, and there are many times that I think she is right.

One of the characters that I can relate to is Gollum, the little creature who had the Ring of Power, lost it to Bilbo Baggins, and has been on a quest to get it back ever since. He refers to the Ring has “my precious.”

While I don’t find Gollum a very admirable character, I will admit that when I get a new airgun, I become just a little tiny bit like Gollum: my latest acquisition become “precious” to me. I don’t want to see my newest pride in joy get banged up, scraped, knocked around, or otherwise molested in any way.  Bottom line: I like to take good care of my gear. I realize that some wear and tear in bound to occur if you actually use and enjoy airguns, but I like to protect them for as long as I can.

As a result, I have become a bit of a connoisseur of gun cases. My very first was a very inexpensive cloth case from a well-known discount chain. The padding was thin, and the case tapered rather sharply. Even though it was allegedly a case for a “rifle and scope,” there were a lot of rifle and scope combinations that simply wouldn’t fit with the case fully closed.

After the first cloth case, I experimented with three different models of hard shell plastic cases with foam lining. These cases work reasonably well but there are some limitations. The first is that not all guns will fit all cases. Some of the hard shell plastic cases are molded in such a way – with intrusions and the placement of the handle – that you can’t always get a gun with a scope to slide comfortably into position.

The second issue with hard shell cases is that, well, that they are “hard” shell cases. They don’t bend or conform to space constrictions. I had this demonstrated to me big time when my brother-in-law, his son, and I were headed to a field target match. We were taking my brother-in-law’s Honda Civic and had half the back seat folded down so that we could fit the gun cases. The problem was that when he showed up at my house, and we tried to slide my hard shell case into the car, it wouldn’t fit. There just wasn’t enough room for three hard shell cases in the space that was available. I put the gun in a soft cloth case, and then it fit.

So . . . all of the above was really just a long-winded introduction for what comes next. Recently, the good folks at www.airgunsofarizona.com sent me one of the nicest gun cases I’ve seen in a long, long time.

The Airguns of Arizona Tactical Case is a cloth case that is rectangular in shape, roughly 47.5 inches long by 13 inches high. That means that this case will accommodate some really large airgun and scope combinations. For example, I was able to place a Benjamin Rogue air rifle, which is one of the largest airguns I’ve seen in quite a while, with scope, inside the AoA case and zip it up completely.

The case can be completed unzipped and folded flat.

The outside is covered in what appears to be black ballistic nylon, and the inside is lined with the same material. Between the two is an impressively deep layer of foam that, it seems to me, ought to provide pretty good protection for your “precious.” A long zipper runs around three sides of the case, so that it can be unzipped completely and laid out flat, providing a convenient surface if you need to do some work on your air rifle.

The zipper has two pulls, so you can rapidly unzip one end or the other. At one end of the case, you’ll find a cloth tab with a metal ring which can be used for hanging up the case. You can also run both zipper pulls to the end of the case and run a lock through the holes on both zipper pulls as well as the metal ring. While this won’t provide ultimate security for your gun (after all someone could cut the fabric to access it), it will prevent the casually curious from getting at it.

Under the velcro flap are two large pockets.

On one side of the case, there is a large Velcro flap. Lift the flap and you’ll find two generous pockets suitable for holding a box of pellets, extra magazines, Allen wrenches, or whathaveyou.  Along the long edge of the case are two cloth carry handles, and on the opposite side of the case is a long padded shoulder strap that can be unclipped if you don’t want to use it.

On the back side is a carrying strap.

In all the AoA Tactical Case is an impressive piece of gear. It’s roomy enough to accommodate most air rifles and the extras you might need, padded well enough to provide a serious level of protection,  yet flexible enough to conform to odd-shaped spaces when needed.

The logo adds a touch of color to an all-black case.

If you are in the market for a soft case for your “precious,” the AoA offering deserves to be at the top of your list for consideration.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight,

–          Jock Elliott