Talk to Hector about short stroking it.i have a D54 that needs a new spring , hoping to find a spring to take it down to maybe 8 to 10 FPE . Shot great before the spring broke .
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Talk to Hector about short stroking it.i have a D54 that needs a new spring , hoping to find a spring to take it down to maybe 8 to 10 FPE . Shot great before the spring broke .
Springers hold their value. PCP’s don’t. That Diana 54 is about $650 new and so long as it’s in good shape will be worth $450-500 for years to come. Try and recoup the purchase price of a PCP sometime.You're try to sell a dinosaur. Those interested in your D54 will be a very, very small niche market. $500 will buy a lot of PCP rifle these days. Good luck, you're gonna need it.
Over 30 years I have sold tons of collectible rifles, good PСP or spring makes no difference. I would sell this rifle for $450+ in a day. It seems you have no idea what you are writing about. It's just that not everyone can be a salesperson.You're try to sell a dinosaur. Those interested in your D54 will be a very, very small niche market. $500 will buy a lot of PCP rifle these days. Good luck, you're gonna need it.
I’ve got to question the whole narrative that springers are on the way out. Springers are just about the cheapest and easiest guns to shoot that still deliver reasonable accuracy. You don’t need a charging apparatus, NFA items, a shooting range set up for firearms or a remote location where you can shoot, you don’t need to pump multiple times for every shot and in .177 or .22 you can practice for less than 3 cents per shot.