jjhack

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For much of my life I have been shooting a very nice precision rifle. It's a rifle I shoot dozens if not a hundred times at each practice session and have likely shot tens of thousands of times in my life. I attribute my marksmanship skills and my quick on target ability to this practice rifle. Many will likely be shocked hearing this from an African Professional Hunter! The rifle is a barrel cocking air gun. I have similiar or identical optics on them to my centerfire hunting rifle and pracice with it all the time. The shooting is nearly silent, dirt cheap, deadly accurate, and easy to do just about anyplace.

Sure I shoot a firearm nearly every week. However the air rifle practice with a 9 pound gun shooting lead pellets nearly the same speed as a .22 rimfire using the same scope is a wonderful and very productive means of practice. High quality air rifles today weigh more then a centerfire rifle so the steady hold you get with practice makes the usually lighter centerfire rifle much easier to shoot freehand. Being able to shoot a 100 shots with no pounding recoil, muzzle blast and low cost is going to assit you in target location time, and trigger control.

I can't even count the amount of guys I know with a huge collection of firearms they never have time to shoot. Several have many thousands of dollars in Expensive guns and scopes but never have the chance to shoot them all. I have told many of them to buy a nice quality air rifle and shoot all you like right at your house. When they hear the rifle will cost 300-500 or more dollars without a scope they freak out exclaiming it's that's an expensive pellet gun! Well maybe so but what is the cost of all those unused rifles you have stocked away? What is the cost and time involved with the reloading? what is the cost and time of travel to get to the range?

The expensive air rifle will give you the time and practice needed to become an expert rifleman in a short time. Consider getting a trigger scale to make the airgun and your centerfire hunting rifle use the exact trigger pull. Then use the same scope. Once you shoot several thousand rounds of airgun pellets you will have a renewed confidence in your centerfire rifle without the punishment and expense of shooting it an equal amount. It will also teach you hold over for longer shots while using the duplex reticle.

Nothing takes the place of your actual centerfire practice but the air rifle will get you tons of cheap and easy pracitice. I know My skills as a marksman started with my Sheridan air rifle in the 60's and 70's. I doubt those millions of pumps I must have put through that old rifle were wasted time now! By comparison there are air rifles made which require one simple cock of the barrel which are going to give you more power and accuracy then the Old Sheridan and Benjamin guns of our youth. My .22 air rifle will shoot through a penny at 10 yards and crack it in half at 20 yards. Yeah it will hit a penny at 20 yards with ease! They also accept scopes and custom trigger adjustments. Think about the amount of practice this tool will give you. It's also a great small game hunting rifle on it's own. I have killed rabbits, squirrels, and many other animals further then 50 yards.
 

revolver

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JJ:
Thanks for the tip. It makes perfect sense. What model airgun have you or others successfully used for rifle practice? Will they accept standard rifle scopes on weaver bases or are special scopes needed?
 

jjhack

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I personally use a Pro Elite made in England. The recievers are milled for standard .22 rings but there are plenty of 1" rings made to use on .22milled bases.

I also use a Beeman RX-2 which is very much like a firearm. It's power is amazing. It does not use a spring to compress the air but a gas charged strutt, similiar but not identical to an automotive gas shock. You actually compress the gas when you cock the gun instead of a steel spring. It discharges with an instant crak and the pellet his the target before you even realize you pulled the trigger. It also has a fair "jolt" when fired. I know I have shot the RX-2 thousands of times and it's as good now as the day I bought it.
 

BusPilot

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Jim: Amen! and Amen! I am amazed at the battery of arms so many hunters have that rarely get shot and more importantly used for focused practice. I am not an expert, but I've long believed there is a big difference between a hunter and a shooter. A hunter can be a guy who pulls out the -'06 once a year un-sighted in and loads it with the same rounds of ammo he didn't use last season as he blasted off to camp with his hunting buddies. A shooter is someone who has few guns, but who shoots them often, and knows his firearms well. He practices with them at various positions and at known and unknown distances. I truely appreciate men and women who are in the "shooter" camp. I know that no matter that their gun looks battered and used that they know what they're doing and they do it well.
 

Freedivr2

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jjhook........I thought I was the only closet pneumatic shooter around town I think you're exactly right. It's the old axiom, practice practice practice that we're talking about here.

I live in the city and it's a 40 mile drive to the nearest rifle range. And I can only go on weekends (and not every weekend due to honeydos). What that does is limits the amount of time during the year that I can practice. While I am very familiar with my M70 and can shoulder it rather quickly (and instinctly), what I think that comes from is from all the shotgun shooting I do in the fall. I practice an off shoulder hold while at the skeet range or of course in the field, and I think that helps me with my rifle mounting and getting a quick spot weld going.

For trigger control and just plain keeping "in a groove" of some sort, I typically shoot a simple .22 cal benjamin franklin pump at least once a week in the back yard, probably a dozen to two dozen rounds, aimed carefully. Helps you practice your steadiness, squeeze, breating, all the stuff you need to do no matter what type of rifle you shoot. P.S., shooting in my backyard with an air pistol or air rifle is 100% legal, according my local (Redondo Beach) police dept., because those are not classified as "firearms".
 

Monkeyman

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064403.jpg


Good point, consider my solution as well: I started my shooting life with a good break-barrel airgun. The limited range taught me stalking and marksmanship. It would only kill an Egret with a neck shot, a mongoose with an earshot and rats in the shoulder. As I got older I wanted something more versatile and used a few .22LRs but they don't always work well for close-range or indoor plinking. Recently I bought a Ruger 77/22 .22LR and bought a magazine converted to feed .22 Shorts. I buy CCI Match Shorts by the case with 40ft/lbs of muzzle energy (same as adult air gun). I shortened the barrel and fitted a suppressor to make it quieter than an airgun and still handy. The controls are the same as my 270 and 375 Ruger Mk2 rifles. The ammo costs a little more than an airgun but I earn (marginally) more money now than when I was 9 years old:) I'm thinking seriously of building a 222 Mk2 so I can do all my shooting on the same type of gun.
 

medic

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excellent way to stay sharp, especially for those of us who cant make it out to the range when we want
 

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