I guess so, unexcitedly, and only because like you @L.LeonCould you elaborate, please…?
1. There is no owners manual with any kind of instructions on how to do anything on it. I read that there is online, but not that I could find. On their sight there are exploded diagrams with parts not instructions.
2. Internal regulator requires partial and painful disassembly to adjust.
3. Only way I know to bleed the air for disassembly is back out the gauge till it releases air (if there is another way I don’t know because there is not owners manual). Though it would have been fairly easy for them to manufacture it so a normal socket would work for that the clearance between the gauge and tube are too tight for normal sockets. Unless you find and purchase a very thin wall socket you can only make about 1/16 turns with a normal wrench. Man it made me nervous bleeding the gun this way.
4. Once you bleed the air to remove the cylinder to adjust the regulator there seems to be two options for removing the cylinder, a. Remove the barrel which requires a special tool that you need to find and buy, and looks like it could be a bear to do. b. Remove the fill nipple that gets in the way turning cylinder, and remove the moderator and then remove the cylinder without removing the barrel. Then figure out how to get the regulator out of the cylinder. Adjust you regulator some, put it back together then go through that all 4-8 more times to get it right.
5. For the .30 cal it is a pretty heavy hammer spring. I the future if I get anything over .25 I think I will get something with a balanced valve that keeps the hammer spring weight down.
6. It is long. I am sure that is fine if you are just shooting from a bench. Probably for a lot of people it is fine for them even in the field. For me I just don’t love the length and have realized I really prefer more compact guns like the Brocock Atomic (that particular reference was for your benefit Leon, I personally have never shot an Atomic).
7. The picatinny rail is very short and split by the magazine. This limits things some. Probably fine for traditional scopes, but it was problematic for what I was mounting on it.
8. Not to big of a deal, and this is getting a little picky, but I am not crazy about the magazines and loading the first round backwards then flipping over to load the rest. And the magazines are expensive. Also mine has a small blemish painted over but still visible on the barrel shroud.
There are plenty of virtues to the gun. Plenty of things that are great about it. So don’t take this as me bashing the gun as terrible, but I am not going to go into the good things because those can easily be found in other posts. This post is about guns we regret buying so I am telling you why I regret it. If you feel you need a more balanced and fair review, I understand, you will easily be able to find that in other posts.
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