I was under the impression that a spring compressor was not necessary for the HW95. I know for sure it is on the 97.
Upvote 0
I was under the impression that a spring compressor was not necessary for the HW95. I know for sure it is on the 97.
According to Vortek, no compressor is required using his kit.You could probably do it without a compressor. Re-assembly would be a fight and things might not go together smoothly.
There wasn't much pressure taking it out (35 lbs) for very long (2-3") with the broken/sagging spring.
I'm putting it back together this afternoon. We'll see how much force it takes to get the genie back in the bottle.
Mine was dry!Should be better. I'm pretty sure those are the newer style HW seals, and every one I've seen on different posts are in similar disrepair..lol. Must be all the grease blowing a hole through them.
A win! Is this a .177 or two, two?The operation seems to be a success.
I re assembled the rifle with the vortek kit. It went back together with no problems.
....if you can push it all in there without a compressor I'd like to watch. There was much more force against the new spring going in than the old one coming out. A compressor is definitely the way to go.
I shot about 25-30 shots and it diesels a bit. Not crazy but a little smoke on each shot. About 35-40 shots it diesels very little. Once I got the smoke worked out of it I set up the chrono.
I shot about 100 shots over the chrono. I had a few low numbers (smoky shots) but it settled nicely between 688-692. The last 25 shots over the chrono were within this range. Only a whiff of smoke once in a while.
Here were the last 5 shots over the chrono. Iron sights. Sitting in a lawn chair with elbows on my knees at 25 yards.
View attachment 515144
It shoots as well as it ever did and the shot cycle is much improved. The velocity is higher than it ever has been. If I can get 10k shots through it before I have to do it again I'll be happy.
A win! Is this a .177 or two, two?