I got my HW95, I must say thank you all for the recommendations. It is very nice, it is easily the quality of some of my center fire guns. The fit and finish are great, the movements are all solid and there is not excess noise or loose parts. My buddy has a Benjamin NP2, and this is much nicer in fit and finish and seems to fit me better.
I really like the shape and it feels natural to hold the stock. It is more of a matte finish than most the online pictures I have seen, but the checkering is very well done. The scope is nice, I like the adjustable parallax. It is 3-9x40mm and has a mildot reticle. The scope rings are aluminum, but seem well made. The cocking effort is not bad at all, and I like being able to decock the gun without firing it.
I gave the barrel a good cleaning with Simple Green soaked patches and then some Break Free CLP and then dry patched it till clean. I mounted and leveled the scope and then I removed and cleaned all the stock and scope screws, and used blue locktite on them and let it set.
I took it out today after work. I had to shoot off the patio due to 30 mph winds and heavy rain. I put a box with a target on it out at 10 yards and surprisingly the scope was only about 1/4" off to the right and slightly low, and it was already shooting tight groups although that is pretty close yardage. Once the weather clears I will get out and really sight it in at 25-30 yards, work on a good pellet selection for it and then shoot the heck out of it!
It is still dieseling on some shots, but I will just keep it swabbing it with dry patches until it stops. I got three different tins of pellets to try. Some Crosman Premiers, JSB's and H&N FTT. The H&N must have been out as they were substituted by AOA for Kaiser but I think they are the same thing, just a higher price point (they charged me the H&N price). It has a sticker saying H&N FTT on the bottom. I hope they are the same as I am afraid they will work really well, and then I will have to pay the higher price for the Kaisers!
I will have to work on my holds and accuracy off-hand, I keep wanting to grip it like a firearm. I used to be a good shot with my Ruger 10-22 off-hand out to 50 yards, but am afraid to say I am out of practice as I tend to shoot off bipods a lot now. I am looking forward to being able to put in trigger time around the house, some small game hunting and pest control. I will no doubt have a learning curve with the springer to get the most accuracy out of it. I may make a set of shooting sticks and see how it shoots off of them. Maybe just to steady my support hand, I do find the airgun a bit heavier than I am used to which makes it harder to steady.
Here are a few pictures:
I really like the shape and it feels natural to hold the stock. It is more of a matte finish than most the online pictures I have seen, but the checkering is very well done. The scope is nice, I like the adjustable parallax. It is 3-9x40mm and has a mildot reticle. The scope rings are aluminum, but seem well made. The cocking effort is not bad at all, and I like being able to decock the gun without firing it.
I gave the barrel a good cleaning with Simple Green soaked patches and then some Break Free CLP and then dry patched it till clean. I mounted and leveled the scope and then I removed and cleaned all the stock and scope screws, and used blue locktite on them and let it set.
I took it out today after work. I had to shoot off the patio due to 30 mph winds and heavy rain. I put a box with a target on it out at 10 yards and surprisingly the scope was only about 1/4" off to the right and slightly low, and it was already shooting tight groups although that is pretty close yardage. Once the weather clears I will get out and really sight it in at 25-30 yards, work on a good pellet selection for it and then shoot the heck out of it!
It is still dieseling on some shots, but I will just keep it swabbing it with dry patches until it stops. I got three different tins of pellets to try. Some Crosman Premiers, JSB's and H&N FTT. The H&N must have been out as they were substituted by AOA for Kaiser but I think they are the same thing, just a higher price point (they charged me the H&N price). It has a sticker saying H&N FTT on the bottom. I hope they are the same as I am afraid they will work really well, and then I will have to pay the higher price for the Kaisers!
I will have to work on my holds and accuracy off-hand, I keep wanting to grip it like a firearm. I used to be a good shot with my Ruger 10-22 off-hand out to 50 yards, but am afraid to say I am out of practice as I tend to shoot off bipods a lot now. I am looking forward to being able to put in trigger time around the house, some small game hunting and pest control. I will no doubt have a learning curve with the springer to get the most accuracy out of it. I may make a set of shooting sticks and see how it shoots off of them. Maybe just to steady my support hand, I do find the airgun a bit heavier than I am used to which makes it harder to steady.
Here are a few pictures: