Gosh....all online except for one trade in person with Michael (great guy). My friend I got into airguns, both of his were in person purchases.
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if you ever got to go to the midwest show , you would have no bank account money left , but a trailer full of everything antique to modern you can think of .Modern guns mostly online.
Vintage guns, in a variety of places.
You mean a second trailer full.if you ever got to go to the midwest show , you would have no bank account money left , but a trailer full of everything antique to modern you can think of .
parts too several guys deal parts , Crossman / Daisy many more
That’s exactly why I like shopping in person best: to check how something fits and feels. Online and print study can provide the numbers but not whether the thing feels comfortable enough that I would use it.All but one online, due to the lack stores. When I started, I went to an airgun show first, and it was amazing because I got to hold and feel a lot of options. Ones I thought I might not like, I ended up liking and vice versa.
Note that there are possibly some smaller stores that you might not know about in your area or state (depending on size of your state and where you live). Lexington Airguns in NC is small, but Artie has some options and is a great guy.
That is why most of mine have been used, so I can check them out and not have to take a huge hit if I don’t like them.That’s exactly why I like shopping in person best: to check how something fits and feels. Online and print study can provide the numbers but not whether the thing feels comfortable enough that I would use it.
I would not buy an automobile without a test drive. The first step of all—getting inside the vehicle—might rule out a model that looked good on paper. At the least, checking fit and feel narrows down the choices. Actually firing the gun would be like a test drive, even better than just going on fit alone.
People for whom noise level matters could check that with a test fire.