Hello everyone, I'm brand new to the forums and air guns in general. I purchased my first air rifle yesterday. I was definitely impatient and just wanted a new toy in my hands to start shooting (read this as I didn't do any proper research). I'm afraid I've made a terrible mistake. The gun I purchased is a Benjamin Prowler .22 cal break barrel rifle from Wal-Mart. It's a "nitro piston" model and came with a "center-point"(branded) 4x32mm scope. I got the first one home to discover a busted scope upon opening the box, I'm assuming from shipping. I went back and exchanged the rifle without issue and came home with a unit that is fully intact. I put the scope on last night and took it out today to start shooting and to attempt to zero in the scope. My first group of 5 (3 very close together, 2 strays to the left of those 3 by about 1-2") landed about 4.5" to the right and about 4" above the target, I was shooting at 25 yards. I made my initial adjustment on the scope and ended up about 2" to the left of target and about 1" above. I repeated this process about 4-5 times and finally ended up being horizontally on target but still high. At that point I started thinking perhaps I just need to get the rifle "broke in" before really worrying about zeroing it 100%. I proceeded to shot around 50-60 shots before I put it up and called it a day. This thing is very difficult to cock (breaking the barrel) and I was absolutely done after the 50-60 shots. The owner's manual claims it will take roughly 250 shots to really break in properly, is that typical? I also discovered the scope was loose after these 50-60 shots.
So have I screwed up buying this rifle? I didn't spend too much (cost $98) thankfully so it's not the end of the world if so.
To recap after the first 50-60 shots I'm:
1. really not zeroed in, especially considering the entire scope has physically moved on the rails.
2. wore out from cocking it.
3. not having fun yet.
I know that I wanted a .22 for the chance to use it for hunting/pest control at some point. I know that I did not want a CO2 rifle as I don't like the idea of buying the little cartridges and the variation from ambient temps, etc. I know I probably should have bought a PCP but I wasn't really down with spending so much ($300+) without being 100% sure I even enjoyed the hobby. I also have no clue where I could even fill the scuba tanks that are used with PCP rifles here in rural TN (that's probably a whole different topic on its own). Anyways, I guess I'm just looking for some form of validation on this purchase. I'm not expecting a cheap Walmart special to be the best thing ever but I'm hoping I can at least make it serviceable. I've seen a few discussions saying that the scopes that ship with these budget rifles are garbage, if that is true what would be a decent option that won't end up costing me more than the entire rifle? After my 250 +/- shot break in period will it indeed become more accurate or easy to cock? Any and all tips/suggestions/recommendations are greatly appreciated. Thank you for reading this if you have made it this far. Have a great day!
-hollywood
So have I screwed up buying this rifle? I didn't spend too much (cost $98) thankfully so it's not the end of the world if so.
To recap after the first 50-60 shots I'm:
1. really not zeroed in, especially considering the entire scope has physically moved on the rails.
2. wore out from cocking it.
3. not having fun yet.
I know that I wanted a .22 for the chance to use it for hunting/pest control at some point. I know that I did not want a CO2 rifle as I don't like the idea of buying the little cartridges and the variation from ambient temps, etc. I know I probably should have bought a PCP but I wasn't really down with spending so much ($300+) without being 100% sure I even enjoyed the hobby. I also have no clue where I could even fill the scuba tanks that are used with PCP rifles here in rural TN (that's probably a whole different topic on its own). Anyways, I guess I'm just looking for some form of validation on this purchase. I'm not expecting a cheap Walmart special to be the best thing ever but I'm hoping I can at least make it serviceable. I've seen a few discussions saying that the scopes that ship with these budget rifles are garbage, if that is true what would be a decent option that won't end up costing me more than the entire rifle? After my 250 +/- shot break in period will it indeed become more accurate or easy to cock? Any and all tips/suggestions/recommendations are greatly appreciated. Thank you for reading this if you have made it this far. Have a great day!
-hollywood