Quite an historically important airgun. The No 5 was the first mass produced airgun and Henry Quackenbush sold his patent to many gun makers in Europe.
This design is referred to as a “gem”. The quality varied depending on the maker. They were cheap to make and had many “cast” metal parts. They were pined and riveted rather than screwed together.
But not the no5! It is one solid airgun. Very heavy and well made.
Inside the patch box on the side is an adapter that fits in the place of the breach seal. This way it could shoot .22 shorts. The piston would strike the adapter which in turn fired the short.
So it’s really a form of combination rifle.
This one is serial number 755 and is around 130 years old.
We all get excited about the quality of the German Airguns but in its day the no 5 was the American gun being copied by the Germans!
This design is referred to as a “gem”. The quality varied depending on the maker. They were cheap to make and had many “cast” metal parts. They were pined and riveted rather than screwed together.
But not the no5! It is one solid airgun. Very heavy and well made.
Inside the patch box on the side is an adapter that fits in the place of the breach seal. This way it could shoot .22 shorts. The piston would strike the adapter which in turn fired the short.
So it’s really a form of combination rifle.
This one is serial number 755 and is around 130 years old.
We all get excited about the quality of the German Airguns but in its day the no 5 was the American gun being copied by the Germans!