Give us some close ups of the engraved r1. Love to see it thanksSome of my favorite airguns, I love the classic springers and these are among the most unique and stylish to me. These are factory offered Tyroleans no aftermarket examples.
Beeman HW55 with heavy barrel weight, Beeman R1 .177 fully engraved, Beeman R1 .20, Beeman HW97, Walther LG55. Walther LGV, FWB 300S, HW77, FWB 150 with rare stock weight & Diana 60.
View attachment 93440
All the beautiful pictures of lovely rifles, and all I can focus on is
1- The accessory weight on the FWB 150
2-The heavy HW barrel sleeve
It's got to be just me right?
Give us some close ups of the engraved r1. Love to see it thanks
did any manufacture make an adjustable Tyro ? i need a high cheek weld i can order a lefty but not adjustable . Although your examples look higher .Some of my favorite airguns, I love the classic springers and these are among the most unique and stylish to me. These are factory offered Tyroleans no aftermarket examples.
Beeman HW55 with heavy barrel weight, Beeman R1 .177 fully engraved, Beeman R1 .20, Beeman HW97, Walther LG55. Walther LGV, FWB 300S, HW77, FWB 150 with rare stock weight & Diana 60.
View attachment 93440
did any manufacture make an adjustable Tyro ? i need a high cheek weld i can order a lefty but not adjustable . Although your examples look higher .
yes , see it / buy it . (cause i will be there too )Smart bet, it only stings the wallet for a little while.
I quickly figured out that I was not the only odd ball looking for left handed match rifles, so If within my means, I try to act quickly.
Oh HECK no! Sights and sleeves and such have become a full-blown separate side addiction since I discovered airguns...All the beautiful pictures of lovely rifles, and all I can focus on is
1- The accessory weight on the FWB 150
2-The heavy HW barrel sleeve
It's got to be just me right?
I read somewhere that the Tyrol stock were designed to be used with "open" or diopter sights, and not with a scope. Is this true, and does it make any difference?
Also, and FWIW, you can always tell a factory Weihrauch/Walther/Anschutz T stock from an aftermarket T stock, ususally a CS/Custom Stocks of Sheffield as shown on many of the guns here: the CS checkering on the wrist is characteristic.
Maybe all the different factory german T stocks all came from the same source?