I have owned the pulsar in .22 and am very familiar with other daystates. I should be able to answer. The renegade still uses the harper slingshot.....same slingshot that is in my wolverine b hilite .22. The difference is the sear is released by the electronic trigger. The electronic triggers are awesome too by the way.
The full electronic pulsar is more efficient with its air useage. This translates into more shots per fill and a quieter airgun. To date....the electronic pulsar I owned with a huggett was by far the quietest airgun I have ever heard. It does not have a regulator.....and that is a bonus. It behaves just like a regulated gun without the potential headaches of a regulated gun. It does not have a regulator.....but make no mistake it is regulated. The electronics adjust the hammer strike force based off of the pressure in the tank.....my pulsar got like 70 shots within about 12 ft per second extreme spread if memory serves. Furthermore, with the full electronic you can adjust the power to low, medium, or high at the push of a button per say.
The renegade should behave like other harper equipped daystates It is still efficient with its air useage. I would expect it to be very quiet with a huggett. Almost as quiet as the full electronic. Again no regulator......but behaves like it is regulated. This to me is a bonus. I get 60 really tight shots from my wolverine with 500cc carbon bottle from 230bar down to 185 bar. The electronic pulsar managed 70+ with like 300cc or 350cc.....cant remember the volume right now. It could be shot down to like 150 bar from 230bar and keep all the shots tightly regulated. I would expect the renegade to get maybe 35 to 40 really tight shots based on its volume and harper valve. Cant go wrong either way. Alot of people are turned off by the electronics but they were faultless for me.