I haven't been a member of Air Gun Nation very long and my appreciation for some "affordable" air rifles may have ruffled a few feathers, I have a thread running about the Ruger Impact Max which is not one of the favored air guns represented here, my experience with my Ruger Impact (a Walmart exclusive in the beginning and marketed as the Umarex Forge in other venues) has been all good, outside of a lousy trigger, the gun is nice looking, well built, reliable, and accurate, it wasn't built in a prestigious German or other European factory, but It's been an excellent shooter.
Well, I'm back with another "Affordable" air rifle, this one is the Crossman Vantage (also marketed as the Remington Vantage), mine happens to be in .177 cal., only because the .22 cal. was out of stock and the .177 cal. was, and on a special sale, most reviews on this gun were mixed, however, Kenny @ myairgunreviews channel did an in depth review of the Vantage (his was in .177 cal, also), he called it a Gem and stated that most of the guns he reviewed went back to the distributer, but the Vantage he tested he was going to keep, it was that good, and IMHO he wasn't wrong.
OK, the Crossman Vantage is not much different than most low priced air guns in that the trigger sucks (but it can be remedied quickly with a couple of different mods, neither of which is involved, expensive, or time consuming, and the included bundled scope is junk, I've had my Vantage for a couple of months and have been shooting it with the included fiber optic adjustable sights and getting excellent accuracy, I put a couple of hundred shots through it to break it in, yesterday I mounted a a Leeper's 3x9 power scope on it, it took about six shots to sight it in at ten meters, then I moved it out to 25 yards, a few clicks down and a few to the right put it in the X-ring, five more shots to settle the scope and then four more five shot strings put all of my shots into one ragged hole that could be covered with a quarter, I was using 10.3 gr. Crossman Premier domed pellets, and experienced no flyers.
I'm sure that there are many break barrel air rifles on the market that can match or better the accuracy that I got with this rifle, but not many of them that sell for $99.99 on sale, and fewer still for that price point come with a nicely finished wood stock and richly blued barreled action.
So, if you're on a budget, don't care where your gun is made, and want a good quality, reliable, accurate, and good looking affordable air rifle, the Crossman Vantage is worth a second look.
Well, I'm back with another "Affordable" air rifle, this one is the Crossman Vantage (also marketed as the Remington Vantage), mine happens to be in .177 cal., only because the .22 cal. was out of stock and the .177 cal. was, and on a special sale, most reviews on this gun were mixed, however, Kenny @ myairgunreviews channel did an in depth review of the Vantage (his was in .177 cal, also), he called it a Gem and stated that most of the guns he reviewed went back to the distributer, but the Vantage he tested he was going to keep, it was that good, and IMHO he wasn't wrong.
OK, the Crossman Vantage is not much different than most low priced air guns in that the trigger sucks (but it can be remedied quickly with a couple of different mods, neither of which is involved, expensive, or time consuming, and the included bundled scope is junk, I've had my Vantage for a couple of months and have been shooting it with the included fiber optic adjustable sights and getting excellent accuracy, I put a couple of hundred shots through it to break it in, yesterday I mounted a a Leeper's 3x9 power scope on it, it took about six shots to sight it in at ten meters, then I moved it out to 25 yards, a few clicks down and a few to the right put it in the X-ring, five more shots to settle the scope and then four more five shot strings put all of my shots into one ragged hole that could be covered with a quarter, I was using 10.3 gr. Crossman Premier domed pellets, and experienced no flyers.
I'm sure that there are many break barrel air rifles on the market that can match or better the accuracy that I got with this rifle, but not many of them that sell for $99.99 on sale, and fewer still for that price point come with a nicely finished wood stock and richly blued barreled action.
So, if you're on a budget, don't care where your gun is made, and want a good quality, reliable, accurate, and good looking affordable air rifle, the Crossman Vantage is worth a second look.
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