I'm really interested in higher volume, lower pressure big bore air guns. I have a 100fpe .59 I made out of PVC...I can fill with a bike pump - but only get one shot.
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I think that with alternative projectiles that low pressure/big bore guns make even more sense. You don't need to launch an arrow, bolt or dart at the same velocity as a bullet and guns like the HDR50 and HDR68 are doing similar things with rubber balls and other alternative projectiles. I remember making low pressure airguns back in the day out of PVC and electric sprinkler valves and the results were impressive considering I was working with less than 200 psi.I'm really interested in higher volume, lower pressure big bore air guns. I have a 100fpe .59 I made out of PVC...I can fill with a bike pump - but only get one shot.
That was my thought, how many tanks blew up before they figured it out..lol.Having used a Hatsan 130 for a number of years 500/600 fps does not sound like much but is surprising! It punches though coconuts and cow bones with good effect and round ball as a projectile has an effect all it's own. There is a detailed book online that is about the building of the replicas. I believe it was there I read that one of the major hang ups to it's production was low quality sheet iron and that more tanks were bursting than holding in the beginning production.
Thanks for posting this. That air rifle has a lot of history and was way ahead of its time.Here is a video I watched a couple years back. Turns out the rifle in the video is the one on display at the museum.
Girardoni Air Rifle - Forgotten Weapons
The Girardoni (also spelled Girandoni) air rifle was a very advanced design adopted in 1780 by the Austrian Army. While the standard arm of the day was a single-shot flintlock, the Girardoni offered a massive firepower advantage to the men who carried it. The guns (designed by Bartholomäus...www.forgottenweapons.com
Thanks for sharing this. Looks like everyone who wants this piece of history for the mantle has just less than a month to get their auction affairs in order to bid on her.One of these very rare original Girardoni rifles is included in Hermann Historica's 100th auction o May 15 this year. Hermann Historica is a leading global Germany headquartered auction house focused on historical weapons. They posted some nice pictures of the gun at https://www.hermann-historica.de/en/auctions/lot/id/1047947 and https://www.hermann-historica.de/upload/100/S/352/
Na, repeating firearms were a definite death nail to airguns. Far more power, faster and easier to operate and maintain, not to mention less cost.Early pump up guns did result in deaths-by-pumping mishaps, which was one reason they were being phased out long before their modern resurgence. Among the aristocracy it wasn't that bad, since the pumping was never done by the shooters themselves, but by servants.
Ironically, Girardoni himself turned from developing groundbreaking firearms to developing groundbreaking wind guns, because his son was killed by an experimental firearm explosion.
I agree there... but you'll find the big bore antiques pretty much went away when repeating firearms came about. Mid 1800'sRepeating firearms were of course eventually rulers of the roost, but that's not the whole truth.
Pump-up airguns were a popular alternative hunting weapon to wealthy woodsmen, especially in the later 1700's. There were many, many manufacturers besides Girardoni, with myriad calibers and power levels. They didn't always have a butt reservoir like the Girardoni, but a separate air tank / reservoir.
There are accounts from the early 1800's where people who used to be enthusiastic airgun hunters said how the potentially lethal pump-up mishaps were the very reason they stopped using airguns.
One period account tells of a servant who had the metal reservoir of an airgun blast through his torso while pumping it up, killing him instantly. Other times, the reservoir exploded from over-pumping or a manufacturing defect, killing people via shrapnel.
This was in the 1700's, long before repeating firearms.