Tube version of the Vet 2 is a much better looking gun than ANY of the various configs with the bottle.
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That is freaking sweet love the long barrel.Ever since I saw the Taipan Veteran 2 tube version, I’ve been lusting after it - it’s beautiful in my eyes.
The 40mm tube holds 311cc of air at 300 bar, so you don’t have to grab the bottle versions.
I want both the 550mm and 700mm barrels, lol. I’ll switch the cocking to the left side.
-Ed
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Ever since I saw the Taipan Veteran 2 tube version, I’ve been lusting after it - it’s beautiful in my eyes.
The 40mm tube holds 311cc of air at 300 bar, so you don’t have to grab the bottle versions.
I want both the 550mm and 700mm barrels, lol. I’ll switch the cocking to the left side.
-Ed
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Me too. I have a .22 Mutant and a Vet 1 but would love the 550 Vet 2 with left side cocking lever. Either .22 or .25. Are the vet 2’s as quiet as the 1’s?
I feel the same way and now regret not getting a vet long. The construction of the original vet looked more solid, especially how beefy the scope rail attahced to the barrel and the air tube. The new frame looks more SPA-like to me.My Compact .25 is pretty plain jane, too. Mine came with a plenum extention. Here’s a couple pics, one of the gun and the other is what the gun is looking at out the window.
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I wonder if Taipan is going to regret dropping the Vet I. I cant excited about V2, and the price is pretty steep
I feel the same way and now regret not getting a vet long. The construction of the original vet looked more solid, especially how beefy the scope rail attahced to the barrel and the air tube. The new frame looks more SPA-like to me.
In general, free floating barrels are preferred over pressure-point assemblies in CF applications in which barrel heat and/or stock moisture can slightly change the POI. In air rifles barrel temp is not an issue, and very few are designed with barrel/stock contact due to the cylinder/bottle location. So IMO free floating barrels have no advantage in most air rifle designs.One of the major improvements touted for the Vet2 is the free floating barrel - as that is generally regarded as the best setup for ultimate accuracy.
So, it will be interesting to see how the V2 compares to the V1 accuracy-wise…