I’ve got a bunch of Sheridans and this QB 78 with a .20 LW barrel. Super accurate out to 75m. Kept the barrel silver as an ode to the Sheridan SS.
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The waiting time is 6+ months to get a hw97k from weihruach. There is a .20 hw77k green laminate for sale but my mind is set on the hw97k due to the hype it has around it. What would you choose? I just sold my hw77k .177 which was tuned.I have two .20 calibers, HW97k and HW95. The .20 is a nice compromise and are less loopy than a .22 at 12 fpe. They are a little easier to load than a .177. Try it, you will like it.
To answer, I have five .20cal air rifles, and a 97K BlueLab on order at AoA.Anybody here have a .20 air rifle? What do you guys think of your .20 compared to your other air rifles.
Again I'm limited to sub 12ft/lb limit.
I'm thinking to exchange my 177 hw77k for a .20 hw97k but the problem is there's only 5 choices of .20 pellets in every store online that I checked in uk.
I only ever plan on having 2 air rifles so if I do get .20 hw97k then the hw77k has to go.
Most recent acqusition is a TM 1000 HFT pistol - this things a SHOOTER! H&N 11.4 at 688 fpsI’ve got a bunch of Sheridans and this QB 78 with a .20 LW barrel. Super accurate out to 75m. Kept the barrel silver as an ode to the Sheridan SS.
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I wouldn't sweat the difference between the 77 and 97. It's more a visual difference than a mechanical difference. The 77 is internally the same rifle. The 97 just looks cleaner with a scope.The waiting time is 6+ months to get a hw97k from weihruach. There is a .20 hw77k green laminate for sale but my mind is set on the hw97k due to the hype it has around it. What would you choose? I just sold my hw77k .177 which was tuned.
They are basically the same rifle. The HW97k has a cleaner look with the pickle and no sights. I would give the green laminate a lot of consideration. This rifle is a laser at 18 fpe, one of my hottest springers.The waiting time is 6+ months to get a hw97k from weihruach. There is a .20 hw77k green laminate for sale but my mind is set on the hw97k due to the hype it has around it. What would you choose? I just sold my hw77k .177 which was tuned.
Eighteen fpe is really honking for that platform. Nice job. Goes to show accuracy can still be had at full power when done right. I like my guns full power.They are basically the same rifle. The HW97k has a cleaner look with the pickle and no sights. I would give the green laminate a lot of consideration. This rifle is a laser at 18 fpe, one of my hottest springers.
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That its in between and probably gives you more fps but similar hitting power of a .22. Only problem is there's only 5 choices of pellets for .20 and only 1 of them is a 11.42 grain which is think would give the best trajectory and power but the rest of them are 13.58 with heaviest .20 pellet 15.89 but those pellets you can find on .22 calibre so I don't see the benefit there. So really only 1 pellet is probably good on .20.I just don't feel the draw. What is it that you all like about the .20?
I just don't feel the draw. What is it that you all like about the .20?
Its a long story.I just don't feel the draw. What is it that you all like about the .20?
I think that for a few decades when the overwhelming majority of airguns produced were between 10 and 16 foot pounds that the .20 just happened to occupy a sweet spot for that power level. Once PCP's came out and springers became more powerful, "flatter shooting than a .22 and harder hitting than a .177" didn't really apply so much anymore.The draw and often referenced, "hits harder than a .177 and shoots flatter than a .22" It can easily be spun into, does not hit as hard as a .22 and does not shoot as flat as a .177! Either way it's a viable caliber and another choice for shooters. I can't vote too hard against it though having won 2 different Hunter piston class state championships with my custom Beeman R9 .20 @15+fpe
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I think that for a few decades when the overwhelming majority of airguns produced were between 10 and 16 foot pounds that the .20 just happened to occupy a sweet spot for that power level. Once PCP's came out and springers became more powerful, "flatter shooting than a .22 and harder hitting than a .177" didn't really apply so much anymore.
True.I think that for a few decades when the overwhelming majority of airguns produced were between 10 and 16 foot pounds that the .20 just happened to occupy a sweet spot for that power level. Once PCP's came out and springers became more powerful, "flatter shooting than a .22 and harder hitting than a .177" didn't really apply so much anymore.