HW100 or HW110?

If you want cure to loading issue try some of these. They work so much better.

I don't own a hw110 but I do have three hw44's. I also have two hw100 bullpups. All are consistently accurate. The only real down side to the 110, as others have said, is the 10 shot magazine vs the 14 shot on the 100. JMO
 
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If you want cure to loading issue try some of these. They work so much better.

I don't own a hw110 but I do have three hw44's. I also have two hw100 bullpups. All are consistently accurate. The only real down side to the 110, as others have said, is the 10 shot magazine vs the 14 shot on the 100. JMO
Thats about correct but a one shot loader is what i use on the 110 and the 100.
 
If you want cure to loading issue try some of these. They work so much better.

I don't own a hw110 but I do have three hw44's. I also have two hw100 bullpups. All are consistently accurate. The only real down side to the 110, as others have said, is the 10 shot magazine vs the 14 shot on the 100. JMO
I'd love to get an HW44 !

Good luck with your 100 vs 110 answer @rangur1 . It seems like the consensus goes with the HW100 , but I'd also be frustrated with these answers as there doesn't seem to be a real type of "I've owned both for a year and here's my opinion" kind of answer.
Mike
 
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The HW100 has a true, multi-lever two-stage trigger. I haven't been able to determine whether that is true of the HW110. I have confidence that the trigger is up to Weihrauch standards, which is among the best. But real, two-stage triggers are rare these days, and I might hang onto my HW100 for that reason alone. But from all I have heard and read, the HW110 is a heck of a good rifle.
 
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My limited research has stipulated that the HW100 is metal and the HW110 utilizes some synthetic materials. Both seem to work well. Also believe the HW110 is monoblock as well as being a smaller block whereas the HW100 is a 2 piece and longer block. Comments on performance and weight / durability?
I have two of each .177 and .22 both models in both calibers are solid great guns !!! Enjoy them! My favorites are the shorter thumbhole versions and as a plus I put titanium airtubes on them to drop the weight significantly
 
The HW100 has a true, multi-lever two-stage trigger. I haven't been able to determine whether that is true of the HW110. I have confidence that the trigger is up to Weihrauch standards, which is among the best. But real, two-stage triggers are rare these days, and I might hang onto my HW100 for that reason alone. But from all I have heard and read, the HW110 is a heck of a good rifle.
OK, I'm a newbie of 3 years in the PCP world. What do you mean by no real 2 stage triggers these days ? Are you saying that today's 2 stage triggers are meant to feel like two stages, but aren't really that ? Thanks, Mike
 
I have a red dot on at the moment. Its far more accurate with a scope. It s the most fun ever and as a carbine even more so. Only downside we are stuck with 6ftlbs. For this as it is thats a joke. Its a rifle surely it can handle 12ftlbs which to be honest is not really much of an imposition.
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OK, I'm a newbie of 3 years in the PCP world. What do you mean by no real 2 stage triggers these days ? Are you saying that today's 2 stage triggers are meant to feel like two stages, but aren't really that ? Thanks, Mike
Exactly right. In a true two stage trigger the sear isn't in its final, fully cocked position until the trigger is moved to the first stage stop. So there is a relatively generous sear engagement before the first stage is squeezed to its final position. It allows a very short, crisp release without the safety risk of the sear always resting on the very edge of release. Many so-called two stage triggers simply have a provision for trigger blade movement before release, but the sear is in its firing position from the time the rifle is cocked with the lever. An example is the Taipan Veteran, a very good trigger. But since I have mine adjusted for a short, light release, I always de-cock it if I'm going to move around, as there is no safety margin in the cocked sear position.
 
I owned 2 HW100s. Easy to rebuild, great engineering, great adjustable trigger, great magazine. I can’t see and ownership or marksmanship issues.
I replaced steel air cylinder with a titanium unit. Helped the balance and shot count.
If someone offered me a free 100 or 110, I would pick the 100 because it can’t be bested.
 
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I owned 2 HW100s. Easy to rebuild, great engineering, great adjustable trigger, great magazine. I can’t see and ownership or marksmanship issues.
I replaced steel air cylinder with a titanium unit. Helped the balance and shot count.
If someone offered me a free 100 or 110, I would pick the 100 because it can’t be bested.
All this talk about Ti-tubes, where do I start?