uglymike, I hear you loud and clear and I believe you. In the right hands, and with the proper technique I'm sure you can make the Gamo Fusion G2 sing. But I guess that's the point I was trying to make. Sure, a 1,000 yard shooter, military trained sniper, instructor, would shoot the pants off of most all of us shooters that go to the gun range once in a while. And although competing with someone of your skill would be a joke for me to even try, I do believe I'm a pretty good shot with all my powder burners. At least in my own eyes, right?
There's a variety of skill levels and even a variety of dedication in any sport. I'll probably get chastised for saying this, but I'm not really interested in learning how to shoot all over again, just to get really good with a break barrel. And to make it worse, I'm not even dedicated enough to spend money on a decent break barrel. I'm expecting the accuracy I get shooting an AR-15 with a Vortex scope from a $250 air rifle. Doesn't sound logical.
However, from everything I've read, the pcp rifles seem to be closer related to 'powder burners' from a shoot-ability standpoint. Unfortunately, I don't have the luxury of being military trained (thank you for your service, by the way), nor am I able to spend hours on a regular basis to just leave the family and go shoot. Now I sound like I whining. (Maybe I am).
To that point, I'm going to get a PCP once I settle on which one to buy, and see what happens. If I'm still walking away with my tail between my legs, I'll update everyone.
And for lunch, are we talking about something on the grill, or just a cold sandwich?