My favorite Springer is a RWS air King in 22 caliber. It's my favorite because out of all my Springer's I find it to be the most accurate rifle I have had
The Air King! They call it King for a reason. That has got to be a heavy gun? Yeah?
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My favorite Springer is a RWS air King in 22 caliber. It's my favorite because out of all my Springer's I find it to be the most accurate rifle I have had
I know this post is about Springer's but my favorite of all is my .20 blue Streak.
Walther LGU Master Pro .177 european 12ftlbs model with steel match trigger and beech stock.
From the box, two shots into the ground.
Scoped with a basic 4x32 single post reticule, 3 shots to zero then it put the next five thro the same hole at 18yards (padded standing rest), pellets Umarex Mosquito 7.40grain ,48gm flat head.
That will do for me, until Ive re-scoped it for field target comps.
Proposed mods; reshape the stock to loose weight and the ambidextrous cheek rest, strip and clean, maybe rework the trigger.
I have an HW97 KTS that is a very nice rifle. Also an RWS 460 that is excellent for higher power needs. Overall my favorite would be one of the Walther rifles I have, either the LGU or the LGV as both shoot extremely well and are always consistent.
Wow, some really beautiful guns and great stories in this post.
I have owned a few nice springers but my favorite so far has been and still is my current FWB 124D that I made my own stock for. I haven't shot springers for a few months but just last week I got it out along with my RWS52 .177 and did a little shooting. I shoot the FWB so much better. Need to shoot it more.
Greenarrow, flat head pellets are the standard for competition such as the Olympics, at short range on rats and squirrels they deliver sufficient energy to ensure a clean kill without the fear it will go right through and perhaps cause secondary damage.
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I hope Ive not broken any rules but Ive copied Randy's stock (above) with the idea of reshaping my lump of German beech into something similar.
Why Walther could not produce a more lightweight stock is the unanswered question for me, the damn thing even has a cheek rest on both sides to add extra and unwanted weight AND it has a ventilated recoil pad, I ask you a recoil pad on an air rifle!!!!!!
Thinks, one reason why the LGU shoots so well could be all this extra weight, at over 11lbs without a scope or mounts it makes a very stable hold.
My ideal would be a custom stock made from poly or nylon??
I really enjoy my beeman silver kodiak in .22. Didn't cost much money and hits targets well.
Gotta go with my bud r1lover on this one (though he obviously is due to update his screen name, LOL). In my tiny brain, the question isn’t so much “what’s the best springer,” as “which member of the classic Weihrauch HW 50/55 family is the best springer.”
This basic design is the perfect mid-size springer. Ideal size, weight, balance. Accurate, fine sights, great trigger. Sturdy, easy to work on with the same threaded-on rear section as HW’s big-frame guns, lots of parts and tuning bits available. Works as a fine target rifle with speeds in the low 600’s, or a crisp light sporter shooting in the low 700’s. Basically what an R7/HW 30 wants to be when it grows up.
These guns are all the same basic action and barrel, with diffs in stock, sights, springs, and trigger tweaks. Top to bottom:
Classic HW 50S from the early 70’s. Super plain stock that fits me like it was custom made.
Much-sought Beeman R8 from the 80’s.
Mid-60’s Vintage HW 55 S (beech sporter stock), this one sporting an even older HW diopter from the 50’s.
Mid-70’s HW 55 M (walnut target stock).
Late-60’s HW 55 Tyrolean.
Last but not least, the only left-handed HW 55 CM (walnut “custom match” stock) I’ve ever seen.
I kind of flip between my two favorites-for pure shooting fun it's the HW55-when I'm looking for dinner it's the R9 in R10 deluxe stock.
I like the 55 because it's elegant and accurate with beautiful lines-the R9 is a nice balance of power and weight-I used mine to combat the "perfect storm" of ground squirrels in 2010-I have the squirrels to thank/blame for my current obsession..(3PCPs, 2 springers, 2 pumpers)
Both are great looking guns BUT I have always liked that style and finish on the older Goudy stocks? I sure would like to have one of those someday.
I think that I could be content with any one of those! Nice collection there. I love the look of the Tyrolean stocks but I have never shot one. How do they feel on the cheek? It looks like it could be awkward?