.22 condor. I've spent plenty of $ to try to make if fit comfortably enough to shoot. Accurate. Powerful. But awkward to shoot. Bt65 in .177 and .25 have been great. The new flashpup s has been a nice experience so far too.
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Regret: My pcp rifles are so single hole accurate I find them to sometimes get boring (lol), especially in the cold winter months when I limited to my indoor range much more. I find myself shooting my springers much more, just to make it at least a little more challenging.
I truly enjoy them all and enjoy the great people I have become associated through this sport. No real regrets.
DZ
My regrets. Ive spend probably over 10,000 on pcp..from the guns to tanks to compressor to fitting to filters to ammo to scopes to mounts to range finger to night vision to mods etc. I could of gotten a girlfriend/wife. Now am lonely man with his PCP airguns in mother's basement.
Regret: Buying any caliber larger than .22! Won’t go into details! Best thing I’ve done is shoot in 25m br comps. Sad thing is the money I spent on the larger caliber’s I could have bought a thomas!
Biggest regret was learning about PCP guns, period, as it pulled me away from my passion of reloading centerfire cartridges for accuracy. I’ve spent so much $$ on tooling for a 30-06, 22-250, 7mm-08, and a 338 Lapua. Tools to disassemble these firearms, dies, concentricity tools, headspace, every case prep tool pretty much made, digital scales, automatic powder measuring tools, and not to mention lbs of powder, boxes of primers, and brass cases in the 100’s, for each of these cartridges.
This pcp hobby truly isn’t buy ”a” pcp gun and a hand pump and your good to go, and won’t need anything else. No way. What pulls you in is the accuracy, the quietness of the shot, and the convenience to shoot anywhere, day or night. With the organization of benchrest competitions it just lures you in even more. What does it take to win? Not a budget pcp and a hand pump. That’s where the dark side comes in, when you start the compressor and tank purchases, which then leads to higher end guns. All my opinions, of course.
Gonna end this with yes, I’m having a blast with this pcp hobby. Just hate seeing my cartridge guns and all I’ve invested towards them collecting dust. I’m hoping my son does something with them all one day.
My regret with PCPs is how insane I went with buying, selling & trading. Some guns I might have for a week, some guns for only a day. I wanted to try them all.