Most new FX guns just have air leaks . . .
Really ?
NEW ánd leaking ?
MOST of them ?
Bit shocking to hear.
Through the years I ve been reading such exaggerations more than once.
Desinformation.
With capital D.
How has it come this far that people online spit out such desinformation without any restraint.
Because my experience with my FX guns have been entirely the opposite, upon hearing online comment "new FX will leak",
uttered as a sort of threatening prophecy,
some years ago started looking for numbers and diving into them. For when it comes down to it, numbers never lie. Only people do. Or exaggerate without restraint.
So,
With all due respect to those bluntly stating as a prophecy 'new FX guns will leak', it would seem their statistics have all been thrown in a heap and then cast overboard, subsequently 'creating' their own blackest of fairytale conclusions.
Perhaps because of ‘hearsay', whatever its ground or motivation . . . maybe some other reason... I m just guessing around here. I shouldn t do that, don t you think so ...
What statistics on the matter have learned to be fact :
NOT - ALL - NEW - FX guns leak. More like quite the opposite when one considers the numbers.
For in fact -percentage wise- very few FX guns at the moment of coming out of the factory will leak.
Even at leaving the gun store, only but a very minor percentage of all FX guns will leak, when considering the massive numbers sold worldwide.
Where does it most often go wrong then ?
Numbers indicate that most of the 'leaking hassles' in most cases start 'shortly afterwards'. After purchase.
How ? And where and when does it happen then ?
What do you yourself reckon ?
At that point the collected statistics confirm the logic :
Numbers have revealed 3 major keys when and why 'leaks mostly appear' :
1. Mostly not when leaving the factory, and neither upon arriving in the airgun shop; but indeed after the gun has been put in the hands of the buyer;
2. In cases of incidental leaks, such are most often to be identified with 'tactical' FX models, in a first instance because of the relatively greater number of o-rings in them, chances of leaks being statistically higher;
3. However not only more frequent leaks merely because of the higher number of o-rings in tactical models, but even more so with 'tactical' models because average buyers (of tactical FXs) from day 1 appear to be immediately lured into screwing and fumbling away 'like a pro' while mostly being all bút a pro, in most of such cases not at all being prepared enough nor informed enough thus mostly without the least of technical skills...
Even with the statistically enhanced 'relative chances' of production flaw because of massive FX production numbers,
most cases of leakage are indeed established :
1. In (FX and other brands) guns carrying the largest number of o-rings in them (when compared to 'classic' pcp guns);
2. With the 'meccano-like' tactical airguns of which their owners thought they could to their heart's content unscrew and screw back on, in many cases even from the first day after purchase.
Obviously some FX buyers will find these observations rather uncomfortable. Those people appear reluctant to be calling a cat, a cat. Rather putting the blame on the manufacturer, in the sense of :
'most FX will leak when bought new'.
MOST ?
NEW FX ?
If that were indeed the case, then it surely is a mystery seeing FX growing year after year...
While logic, reason, and numbers actually sound like :
Most new owners of FX air rifles overestimate themselves when improperly starting to screw and fumble away on their new rifle from day one.
The chances of
'MOST NEW FX will leak'
are about as high as
'FX USA systematically sabotaging (sic) most of its US imported FX guns (sic) on purpose (sic)'.
I mean, why spreading such desinformation like it were 'common truth' ?
Let's at all times remain reasonable, looking for reason and logic.