Can anyone recommend an air pistol/rifle with a threaded barrel for under $100? Thanks.
think he is meaning moderator thread ? is what i read into it ?Do you mean "rifled" barrel, as opposed to smoothbore?
Possible, but newer member might not be sure of correct wording, that's why I asked. Clarification, either way, would help in answering.think he is meaning moderator thread ? is what i read into it ?
Can anyone recommend an air pistol/rifle with a threaded barrel for under $100? Thanks.
The only one for around a hundred bucks I can think of would be a crosman 2240 XL. There are 115 bucks from pyramid air. If you rework the trigger spring by compressing it all the way or by replacing it with a lighter spring the trigger becomes usable. Right out of the box the triggers are pretty stiff. They shoot well, they're accurate only drawback would be that it's CO2 so if you're outside in the winter time don't expect it to shoot very hard.Can anyone recommend an air pistol/rifle with a threaded barrel for under $100? Thanks.
Yep, the Chaser pistol comes with a threaded barrel. The fluted piece at the muzzle is a thread protector. Also, both of the Chaser pistol/carbine kit gun barrels are threaded, and the kit includes a moderator./www.airgundepot.com/diana-chaser-pellet-pistol.html
think you can buy an adaptor for moderator or a slip on from Buck rail
Given the barrel has no sights to content with and can be chucked in a lathe?I would expect to pay a hundo minimum for a crown and threading from a Smith.
Your thinking about rifled slugs like we used for shot gun deer hunting back in the day and bet there are a lot that still use themSome time ago I was thinking about the idea of having slugs with three slight channels/ lines in the external borders that could make the slugs to spin in the correct rate, irrespective of the barrel used to shoot them.
Given the barrel has no sights to content with and can be chucked in a lathe?
I'd do them for less then a hundred if only the barrel was sent to me.
Ain't that pretty much what we do?WE just keep yacking away and the guy hasn't showed up again ?
That hasn't been my experience at all, but I would say it depends mostly on what a user wants, expects and needs from an air rifle. I have simple needs, so I GREATLY enjoy the overwhelming majority of my sub-$100 air rifles. For example, by shopping around online, eventually I found the spankin' new Crosman 362 pumper on sale for about $90.00 delivered (the MSRP at the time was $109.00, IIRC) and it's absolutely one of my super-fun, very favorite air rifles. I scored my first Crosman 2289 Drifter 'kit,' with an MSRP of about $112.00, soon after release, from an online site that gives their users discounted prices on their birthday, under $100.00, along with lots of other discounted goodies, all shipped free, and I loved that one so much I bought another not long after!I cannot, but I would say that an air rifle for under $100, with any kind of barrel, is not going to be very satisfying.
I have one of those Turks. Love the gunDepending what rifle you buy, you can ask a tuner to get it done for you but might likely cost you an easy $100.
Back a few years ago, AoA was selling off the last of their Turkish built Webley Tomahawks (same rifle as the Hatsan Model 95) that had threaded barrels at the cut rate price of $99.99, but Hatsan never did it to their own. I have 4 of those Tomahawks and the ported muzzle break unscrews if you want to put an LDC on the end. While they help with the down range noise, they do very little at the muzzle since even well tuned, you still get noise from the action. No one in the US sells anything Webley branded and haven't for a few years so even if you wanted one, you'd have to search the used market or put up a Want to Buy ad and see if anyone actually has one and wants to sell it.
Pistols? I have a Sig P226 .177 pistol with a threaded barrel end but you'd have to look to see what they go for these days. Might well be more but someone who does more pistol shooting will have to chime in.