Posts Tagged ‘Hatsan’

The Hatsan Model 95 is a handsome air rifle.

The Hatsan Model 95 is a handsome air rifle.

Lately I have been testing some inexpensive air rifle/scope combos. The Hatsan 95 Combo is one of those. But before we get into that, let’s back up for a moment and take the 30,000-foot view.

In the online forums, it would appear that some airgunners simply don’t “get” the idea of the price/performance curve. It can be thought of as a graph in which you plot the price of a product on one axis and the performance of the product along the other axis. For almost every single product I can think of, the price/performance curve shows that, in general, you get what you pay for; that is, the more you pay, the more performance you get.  (There are, of course, occasional exceptions, products that provide exceptional performance at a modest price, but these are rarities.)

Another way to look at this concept is in terms of tiers (this is quoted from a recent issue of SHOT Business magazine, if you want to read the whole article, you can see it here: http://shotbusiness.org/the-new-world-of-airguns/ ):

  • Tier 1, $20-$200 – These are the pump-up, spring-piston, and CO2 air rifles and pistols you are likely to find in big-box discount retailers and the airguns the public is most likely to know about. Familiar brand names in this category include Crosman, Daisy, Sheridan, and Gamo.
  • Tier 2, $200-$500 – These are the better made pump-up and spring-piston air rifles as well as less expensive PCP airguns that are sometimes carried by independent sporting goods shops. These are, by and large, “legacy” airguns that get passed from generation to generation.  Familiar brands in this tier include Benjamin, BSA, Gamo, RWS, and Weihrauch.
  • Tier 3, $500-$3000 – These are the top echelon, elite performers of the airgun world. Comprised mainly of PCP rifles and pistols, this category also includes very high end spring-piston rifles. These airguns that will have the guys at the gun club drooling with envy, especially when your airgun customers outshoot them. Familiar brands in this tier include Air Arms, Air Force, Anschutz, Benjamin, Brocock, BSA, Daystate, FWB, FX, RWS, and Weihrauch.

Bear in mind that these tiers are generalities, designed to help independent gun dealers get their heads around why they should carry airguns, but typically in Tiers 2 and 3, you can expect very good to outstanding quality, and you can expect to pay commensurately for the privilege.

The Hatsan 95 features a Turkish walnut stock and a gold colored metal trigger.

The Hatsan 95 features a Turkish walnut stock and a gold colored metal trigger.

Tier 1, however, is much more of a mixed bag, and it’s in Tier 1 that we find the Hatsan Model 95. Available in three calibers (.177, .22, and .25), this is a single-shot spring piston air rifle that stretches 44.3 inches from end to end and weighs 9 lbs. 1 oz. with the scope that comes as part of the combo attached.  I tested the .177 version. Two things struck my eye when I pulled the Model 95 out of the box: the Turkish walnut stock and the gold-colored metal trigger. The result is a very nice looking air rifle.

The butt pad is a soft rubber-like material.

The butt pad is a soft rubber-like material.

At the back end of the Model 95 is a soft rubber butt pad which is attached to an ambidextrous walnut stock. The modestly-slanted pistol grip has checkering on either side. Forward of that, a black trigger guard surrounds the trigger. Moving forward again, the forestock is checkered on either side, and underneath you’ll find a slot to provide clearance for the break barrel cocking linkage.

The polymer muzzle brake serves as a mount for the fiber optic front sight.

The polymer muzzle brake serves as a mount for the fiber optic front sight.

At the muzzle end of the barrel is a molded polymer muzzle brake which also serves as a mount for the red fiber optic front sight. Moving aft, you’ll find a green fiber optic micro adjustable rear sight on top of the breech block. Moving back again, the receiver has dovetails to allow mounting a scope, and near the aft end of the dovetails is a metallic scope stop that prevents the scope from moving backward along the scope rail when the shot goes off. Finally, at the extreme aft end of the receiver is a push-pull type safety. Other than the 3-9 x 32 non-adjustable-objective scope, that’s all there is to the Model 95.

To get the Model 95 ready to for shooting, grab the muzzle break and pull it down and back until the cocking mechanism latches. I estimate this takes a bit over 30 lbs of effort. Next, insert a pellet into the breech and return the barrel to its original position. Take aim, click off the safety, and squeeze the trigger. At 1 lb. 3.3 oz. the first stage comes out of the trigger, at 4 lb. 14.2 oz., the shot goes down range. The Model 95 launches 7 grain hobby pellets at 995 fps for 15.4 fp of energy at the muzzle.

The report is typical for a springer of this power, and the powerplant generates some vibration, but it is more heard than felt by the shooter. Hatsan says that the Model 95 is equipped with something called the Shock Absorber System, but I was unable to find out more about this system from the factory website. While it does not make the Model 95 recoilless, it certainly is not an unpleasant springer to shoot.

The Model 95 Combo, though, it not without problems. The scope and its mounts are basically junk. I had two scope mounts fail while testing the Model 95 (www.airgunsofarizona.com sent me replacements), but that is not the crucial problem. The scope, being non-adjustable-objective, cannot be focused. At 3 power, I could not see clearly at 13 yards, at 9 power, I could not see clearly at 20 yards. This made accuracy testing extremely problematic. I might have been the victim of unit-to-unit variation, but the scope that came with this sample was – flatly – useless. I would recommend either mounting a better scope or going the simple route and use the fiber optic open sights that come with the Model 95. (For the record, the good folks at Airguns of Arizona recommended to Hatsan that they either include a decent scope in the combo or don’t include a scope at all.)

I mounted a good scope – a Vortex – and tested the Model 95 for accuracy. Eventually, I was able to achieve at 5-shot group, shot with JSB Express pellets, at 32 yards that measured 1.1875 inch from edge to edge. That’s just a hair over 1 inch CTC. Now while that is hardly superb accuracy for a springer at that range, it is certainly sufficient for clearing the garden of pests at 100 feet.

In the end, the Hatsan 95 is a decidedly mixed bag. The scope and mounts are dreadful. The rifle itself, however, is nice looking and pleasant to shoot. The accuracy is not stellar but sufficient for plinking and pest control in the back yard at modest ranges. I’ve heard rumors that the .22 version is more accurate than the .177. Perhaps I’ll have the opportunity to test one in the future.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

To ready the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine for shooting, grab the cocking handle at the end of the cocking lever, unsnap it from it retaining fitting at the end of the barrel, and pull it down and back until latches with two tiny clicks. If you hear only one click (as I did the first couple of times I loaded the 200S), the breech block will slide out of the way, you’ll be able to load the 200S, but you will not be able to release the anti-beartrap mechanism that allows you to return the cocking lever to its original position. So you want to hear two clicks . . . got it?

The breech opening has a low cut only on the right side, favoring right-handed loading.

Next, stuff a pellet into the aft end of the barrel, and here is where we discover that, while the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine is designed with an ambidextrous stock, the cut of the breech opening is decidedly biased toward the right side of the receiver. As a result, I think that left-handed shooters will find that they will either have to (A) roll the 200s to the left so that the breech opening faces to the left or (B) learn to load this air rifle right-handed.

This is the anti-beartrap release lever.

After loading the pellet, press the anti-beartrap release lever in (toward the receiver) and return the cock lever to its original position. Turn off the safety by sliding the lever toward you and squeeze the trigger. At about 10 oz. the first stage comes out of the trigger,  and at 5 lbs 5.5 oz the pellet goes down range. The shot goes off with a pop that is typical of underlever spring-piston air rifles. It is not dead quiet, but, in my opinion, it is pretty neighbor-friendly and is not the kind of sound that is likely to attract unwanted attention.

The Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine is a relatively heavy rifle – 9.7 lbs – so it doesn’t dance around a lot when it goes off. In addition, the Hatsan company says that it is equipped with a patented Shock Absorber System that reduces shock and vibration. In all honesty, I can’t tell you how – or even if – this system works, but I can tell you that the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine is a pleasant rifle to shoot.

The Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine launched 15.9 grain JSP .22 pellets at around 590 fps for about 12.29 foot-pounds of energy (It’s also available in .177 caliber, which I did not test.). At 32 yards, I was able to put five .22 Crosman Premiers into a group that measured 7/8 inch edge to edge. That works out to .66 inch center to center.

In the end, I really liked the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine. I think it will serve a lot of airgunners well, and it hits a real sweet spot on the price/performance curve.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

 

The Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine is, I think, a good looking air rifle.

Some time ago, the good folks at Airguns of Arizona told me that they had “gone to UPS school.” They rang up the experts at UPS and asked them, point-blank, “How should we package airguns so they get there safely?” The UPS packing geeks said: “Put the airgun box inside another box and surround it with packing peanuts.”

And that’s what the Airguns of Arizona crew does. Every time a box arrives at El Rancho Elliott from AoA, I know that inside is an airgun (or two or three), each in its own box and surrounded by Styrofoam peanuts. So whenever I receive a shipment from AoA, I have to decant the peanuts into a plastic garbage bag and the slide the individual gun boxes out of the outer box into freedom where I can have my way with them.

It’s a system that works. In the years have I have been writing this weekly blog, only once has a gun been broken in shipment. That’s way less than a third of one percent failure rate. So you can imagine my dismay when I found that one end of the inner box that housed the Hatsan Dominator 200s Carbine had blown out. Bits of plastic packing inserts, polymer parts, and some cloth were trying to sneak their way out of the small end of the package.

It was not a good first impression – a bit like your daughter’s first date showing up with his shirt half untucked, mis-matched socks, and still trying to tie his tie while he rings the doorbell. As I looked inside the Hatsan box, which says “Serious. Solid. Impact.” and sorted out the various pieces, which included a bipod, a scope arrestor block, buttpad spacer inserts, a couple of allen wrenches, a sling and the rifle itself, I remember thinking to myself “I hope this goes well.”

But, in fact, it did go well, and the overall impression that I came away with after testing this gun is that the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine is a solid bargain in the world of air rifles, particularly when you consider that it costs just a hair less than $310.

But let’s start at the beginning: the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine is a single-shot underlever spring-piston air rifle that stretches just over 43 inches from end to end and weighs 9.7 lbs without at scope. At the aft end of the 200S is a soft rubber butt pad. There are a couple of screws buried deep in the butt pad. Undo them and you can add up to three 5mm spacers (included with the gun) to increase the length of pull as needed.

The length of pull can be adjusted using spacers that are provided, and the comb can be raised by turning these two screws.

The butt pad is attached to a matte-black-finished ambidextrous polymer stock. On the right side of the stock are two large screws that allow the height of the comb to be adjusted with a screwdriver or coin. Underneath the buttstock is a metal swivel to which a sling (also included) can be attached. On either side of the pistol grip and the forestock, you’ll find soft rubber inlays for better grip.

The trigger is adjustable.

Forward of the pistol grip, a black plastic trigger guard encloses a black adjustable metal trigger. Moving forward, underneath the forestock is a long slot that provides clearance for the cocking mechanism. On the left side of the forestock, there is another sling swivel. Protruding from the front of the forestock is the cocking lever which has a knurled metal cocking handle. Above that is the barrel. The muzzle is equipped with a screw-off cap that can be removed for fitting a sound moderator (where legal).

The fitting at the end of the barrel can be unscrewed for adding a silencer where legal.

Moving toward the rear along the barrel, you’ll find the receiver, finished in black with a silver-colored breech block. Aft of the breech on the right side of the receiver is a lever for releasing the anti-beartrap mechanism after cocking the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine. On top of the receiver is an ingenuous dovetail system that will accommodate both conventional 11-13mm scope rings as well as Picatinny scope rings. At the extreme aft end of the receiver is a push-pull resettable plastic safety lever.

That’s it! Next time, we’ll take a look at how the Hatsan Dominator 200S Carbine performs.

Til then, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott