Shut-in project finally complete

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Being a rabid airgun tinkerer that has found certain Chinese airguns to be excellent canvases, I figured the irresistible Artemis PP750 would be an excellent platform to keep me occupied through the pandemic shut-in. Utterly smitten by the little pistol/carbine's awesome looks, features and possibilities, in stock form it pushes many of this airgun freak’s hot-buttons. If it possessed similar potentials to a couple other Chinese airguns I’ve written about, I’d be riding-out the pandemic shut-in in airgun Nirvana.

A buddy that tried to order a PP750 a few days after I did said he was told I got the last PP750 that Krale had in stock. Amazingly, the PP arrived on my Texas doorstep from the Netherlands two days after I placed the order! Unfortunately it slow-leaked through the firing valve from the get-go. Repressing my fear of diving into The Great Unknown, I found the PP750 not only an aweswomely simple and easily serviced design, but of excellent quality. After exchanging a few emails and photos with Bjorn at Krale, a replacement for the broken part responsible for my leak arrived just three days after our correspondence. BTW, the replacement part is beefier than the broken original; so apparently Snow Peak Airguns recognized the problem and corrected it early on.

With the leak corrected, velocity testing commenced with the hope for similar performance to a .22 MRodAir Airmax PCP pistol that embarrassed an eerily-similar designed HIGH-DOLLAR PCP pistol in an AWESOME AIR PISTOLS chapter titled Czech-Mate! Velocity testing proved the PP750 up to my power and shot-count hopes. Typical of most PCPs, the little carbine returned a bit more muzzle energy with 15.9 grain JSB Exact Jumbos than it did with a bit-faster 14.3 grain JSB Exact Express, that energy advantage growing at extended ranges.

With ballistic questions answered, I forged ahead to explore the PP’s accuracy capabilities. In the course of bench-rest testing it soon became apparent a rifle scope was in order. Wanting enough magnification to not compromise the testing but also not so huge and heavy an optic to physically and aesthetically overwhelm the cool little mini-carbine, being one of the smallest and lightest non-‘compact’ 3-9X rifle scopes I’ve found, a 3-9X32mm Weaver Classic Rimfire/Airgun scope proved a silver-slipper fit.

Considering the practical applications for a pistol-based mini-carbine, I decided to start accuracy testing at 35 yards. Though I had no plan to use the PP750 in field target, I was happy to see it achieve my personal accuracy standard for a field-target pistol; that being five-shot groups at 35 yards averaging 3/4” (center-to-center) or less. For longer-range work, a .70” average translates to 1” or less at 50 yards, mathematically and realistically. Rather, I should say realistically in no more than light wind conditions. A .22 caliber pellet launched with 14 foot-pounds of muzzle energy doesn’t exactly “buck the wind” well. But in little-to-no wind conditions, the little mini-carbine indeed averages 1” five-shot groups at 50 yards.

As the number of accuracy-testing sessions accumulated it became obvious the PP rig did not hold a zero well from day to day; no small handicap in a hunting gun. So as impressed as I was with the PP’s sliding front scope mount that clamps to the chamber-tube (connecting it to the shrouded barrel), I realized it had to go.

Thankfully I found the right solution in my ‘collection’ of scope mounts with a set of BKLs that include one offset mount and one non-offset. BINGO… problem solved! In the many bench-rest sessions since removing the offending factory scope mount in favor of two mounts anchored to the short grooved receiver, only once have I had to make a scope adjustment to bring point-of-impact back in line. That adjustment was only 3 clicks of elevation, and came after much monkeying with the gun during a two-week custom grips and cheekpiece project.

I'd found the least impressive part of shooting the PP came from making cheek contact with the steel rods of the retracting shoulder-stock. Besides a distinct “Oh, that’s cold” impression, the thin rods not only don’t give a comfortable ‘cheek weld’, but flex a bit in use; none of those distractions contributing to the level of concentration required for precise shooting.

Unfortunately after discovering a custom wooden cheekpiece solved the cheek-weld and flex issues, I also discovered a matching piece of Shedua large enough for a set of matching grips. DOH! Well, I was looking for a project to get me through the pandemic shut-in, and the shut-in is dragging on… and on. I’m pleased with the custom grips and cheek-piece; nice cherries atop my sweet, sweet 'Little Sidekick' pesting rig. 

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Since a retired game warden buddy educated me to the fact that some pest species I’ve previously given a pass have quite voracious appetites for ground-nesting game-bird eggs, I decided to set the PP750 up to thin out some of those same pests that also have a bad cat-food habit. The night-pesting rig having proven quite well-suited for practical offhand shooting, Little Sidekick has also proven perfect for the task at hand. She is also quite handy from the Polaris Ranger.

And easy on the eyes.

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.22 Artemis PP750 sidelever PCP pistol/carbine

14.3 gr JSB, 235 BAR, 18 shots- Low= 637, Hi= 669, ES= 32, SD= 5, Avg= 653 FPS/13.5 FP

15.9 gr JSB, 235 BAR, 19 shots- Low= 620, Hi= 640, ES= 20, SD= 3, Avg= 630 FPS/14.0 FP

4/6/2020- Five consecutive 5-shot groups at 35 yards with 15.9 grain JSBs averaged .70” c-t-c.

4/242020- Six consecutive 5-shot groups at 35 yards with 15.9 grain JSBs averaged .73” c-t-c.

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One question dude. Let's get down to brass tacks how much for the upgrades you did? Honestly it looks great. I gave my pp700w to my 7 year old and have regret it ever since. Granted I'm proud of her for hitting all those dime sized groups at 10 yards but I miss my pistol. Honestly those guns are really accurate. Mine took some barrel work on my part but out of the box it was making dime groups at 10 yards. After I polished and crowned it.... Oh boy hole in hole and by that I mean at 10yards it looks like one hole. Obviously at longer ranges with wind etc it opens up but those Chinese guns actually rock. I get 14 to 14.5 fpe out of mine although I converted my 177 to 22 so..... Who knows. Great work dude! 
 
"how much for the upgrades you did?"

Considering I have a good bit of different exotic wood species left over from a couple years of a professional custom bow building venture a couple decades ago, I'd guess the small amount of Shedua wood I used cost me no more than a couple bucks. The amount of Fullerplast spray (automotive dashboard) finish including catalyst and thinner, maybe another buck-fifty. So adjusted for inflation, a total materials cost of maybe four bucks. Labor is a completely different story! 

Considering I was (otherwise) always in the bicycle business, which pays about like indentured servitude, and have now been retired for a little over a decade, I'd estimate my time worth all of a couple bucks an hour. With about 15 hours invested in the custom woodwork and roughly as much in mechanical fiddling and testing, the best bottom line guesstimate I can hazard is maybe $64.00 total investment in upgrades.

However that guesstimate would be slightly different for anyone that didn't spend their whole working life in the bicycle and custom bow business. Adjusting the time/labor part of aforementioned guesstimate to reflect non-indentured servitude wages would adjust the total investment in upgrades to roughly $754.00. 

FWIW, I long ago realized the only way to justify all my airgunsmithing and airgun writing was with the phrase "labor of love" (meaning it's hard to put a price on love, but more often than not it's a losing proposition). BTW, yes, I do sleep with Little Sidekick. 😳

"where's me hat so I can tip it." Just an educated guess SV, but I'd start looking for it the last place you heard "Last call". 😴 That often works for me.




 
AirNGasman,

I am very grateful for this post because you just saved me almost $200! I also have the PP750 and wanted to scope it to see what it's capable of. 1st i bought a japanese glass old Tasco pistol scope 1.5X on ebay ... good, but not good enough for my eyes. then i bought a TC 2.5-7X pistol scope.... focus inside 25yd is poor and parallax must be set at 100 or something ...me no likey. So I decided I have enough pistols and I really like shooting this with the stock pulled out so I was thinking I need a scout scope, until I read your post :)

Started playing with hold, head position, and stance to see how you were using a rifle scope and... I like it! I had a Bugbuster laying around that has never been mounted and apparently this was what I bought it for. One accuracy point for you my friend. I hope you don't mind if i use your grip and cheek piece idea, I have a nice piece of grey laminate that needs used.
 
WNP,

Dude, you just reinforced the only thing that sometimes keeps me 'wasting' so much time on my airgun labors of love; that being occasional nice feedback, especially from someone that found my airgun BS actually worthwhile! Thank you for the nice feedback, Bud.

I'd think Bugbusters would be a(nother) natural 'silver-slipper fit' for the PP750. But to repeat myself, should you find your PP not holding zero from day to day, I believe the cool sliding front scope mount was the culprit on my gun. 

BTW, I own at least a couple of the T/C 2,.5-7X (discontinued) pistol scopes that I like pretty well for hard-kicking pistols. That being the case, I haven't really used them at air pistol ranges; usually 50 to 100 yards. Being Japanese made, I consider them all-in-all excellent LER pistol scopes; however also consider LER pistol scopes somewhere between optically-lacking and a PIA compared to rifle scopes.

Between your statements, "I am very grateful for this post because you just saved me almost $200!" and "I hope you don't mind if i use your grip and cheek piece idea", I'll just say "Tipping is not a city in China", and refer you to my GoFundMe page. It can be found by Googling 'Destitude Airgun Freak' (not to be confused with my 'BailForAirgunDesperado' GoFundMe page). 😂

Thanks again for the kind words WNP.

How 'bout sharing a photo of your Bugbuster PP with us?