I find myself in a bit of a quandry….
I currently own a TX200 .177 that I have had for about 8 years+. It has been tuned (by me) with the vortek 12 fpe kit and proper amount of lube. Sweet shooting rig that I absolutely love.
In an effort to trim down my very modest collection last November I purchased a TX200 Walnut in .22 from Straight Shooters. It is beautiful. I have shot it about three sessions for about 150+ rounds. Bone stock ie: not tuned.
I shoot mostly HPA rifles and have a fill station using Nitrogen so with the twist of a few knobs I am topped off and ready to shooot some more.
My problem is I am thinking of just selling the TX200 and have found another .22 HPA rifle for a great price. Problem is the market seems plenty saturated these days and I am currently listing the rifle at about a $225 loss over what I paid for it new. I know you lose when you sell fromm buying new, but how much is too much right?
So I love asking co-workers who are not into airguning what they would do. For me it is refreshing to hear someones opinion if they are not in the sport as they might have a different point of view.
I asked Amber and explained the concept of tuning and that the .22 would make it so I could have one springer in each caliber etc. I asked her if I should sell at a loss or keep the TX. She said “Why not tune the .22 yourself and then shoot it some and see if you end up liking it more tuned than stock. If you do not you can sell it then.” Brilliance I thought.
So question is – should I sell the TX200 Walnut .22 at a big loss or buy a readily available tune kit and tear down, clean, deburr, clean, rebuild and shoot that thing?
If the answeris to go tuned what kit should I try?
Thank you in advance for your help!
~GOD BLESS~
john
Pics of the TX200 .22
Pic of the .22 and the .177 together
I currently own a TX200 .177 that I have had for about 8 years+. It has been tuned (by me) with the vortek 12 fpe kit and proper amount of lube. Sweet shooting rig that I absolutely love.
In an effort to trim down my very modest collection last November I purchased a TX200 Walnut in .22 from Straight Shooters. It is beautiful. I have shot it about three sessions for about 150+ rounds. Bone stock ie: not tuned.
I shoot mostly HPA rifles and have a fill station using Nitrogen so with the twist of a few knobs I am topped off and ready to shooot some more.
My problem is I am thinking of just selling the TX200 and have found another .22 HPA rifle for a great price. Problem is the market seems plenty saturated these days and I am currently listing the rifle at about a $225 loss over what I paid for it new. I know you lose when you sell fromm buying new, but how much is too much right?
So I love asking co-workers who are not into airguning what they would do. For me it is refreshing to hear someones opinion if they are not in the sport as they might have a different point of view.
I asked Amber and explained the concept of tuning and that the .22 would make it so I could have one springer in each caliber etc. I asked her if I should sell at a loss or keep the TX. She said “Why not tune the .22 yourself and then shoot it some and see if you end up liking it more tuned than stock. If you do not you can sell it then.” Brilliance I thought.
So question is – should I sell the TX200 Walnut .22 at a big loss or buy a readily available tune kit and tear down, clean, deburr, clean, rebuild and shoot that thing?
If the answeris to go tuned what kit should I try?
Thank you in advance for your help!
~GOD BLESS~
john
Pics of the TX200 .22
Pic of the .22 and the .177 together