Yes there is. Cocking effort.Unless you specifically want a lighter, smaller, short-range plinker, there’s really no need to get an HW30 if you already own an HW50.
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Yes there is. Cocking effort.Unless you specifically want a lighter, smaller, short-range plinker, there’s really no need to get an HW30 if you already own an HW50.
Good point. I think that for most of us here it's not an issue, but when you're talking about an HW30 you're talking about the gun that women, kids and first time shooters get handed and for them cocking effort is an issue.Yes there is. Cocking effort.
I know the older I get I appreciate less cocking effort.Good point. I think that for most of us here it's not an issue, but when you're talking about an HW30 you're talking about the gun that women, kids and first time shooters get handed and for them cocking effort is an issue.
I sort of disagree. If I could only have one airgun it'd be my 177 Hw50. However I enjoy shooting my 177 hw30s much more. Any one of them gets used more than my 50. Only thing the 50 does better is pest. Even then my 30s have killed more incidental Gray squirrels out to 25 yards than my 50 has deliberately out to 40 yards. Those are my self imposed range limits for each.Unless you specifically want a lighter, smaller, short-range plinker, there’s really no need to get an HW30 if you already own an HW50.
Good point, they are indeed a bit easier to cock, but I reckon most men can manage a 10-11 fpe HW50s with just their pinkie, so that's not a huge selling point for me personally.Yes there is. Cocking effort.
Well, I agree with you—they are wonderful little rifles, and you basically summed up the "unless" points perfectly!I sort of disagree. If I could only have one airgun it'd be my 177 Hw50. However I enjoy shooting my 177 hw30s much more. Any one of them gets used more than my 50. Only thing the 50 does better is pest. Even then my 30s have killed more incidental Gray squirrels out to 25 yards than my 50 has deliberately out to 40 yards. Those are my self imposed range limits for each.
The 50 is a wonderful does everthing well gun but it can't replace a 30. The 30 is just a pure joy to shoot and at least as accurate. My 30s usually best my 50 and they can hang with my 97 out to 25-30 yards. Amazing little guns.
Maybe a ten fpe and under hw50 you might cock with a pinkie. I run mine close to 12 and I don't think you or I are cocking it with a pinkie. I've tuned bunches of these and at this power level and the cocking effort on mine is pretty normal.Good point, they are indeed a bit easier to cock, but I reckon most men can manage a 10-11 fpe HW50s with just their pinkie, so that's not a huge selling point for me personally.
Again the 50 is a great gun but I think you might be exaggerating a tad on the pinkie thing.
As Mycapt65 notes, the 50 is relatively hard to cock for its power.
Ha, I hear ya. Here in east Tennessee, Daisys are toddler toys and grade-school kids get rimfires as their starter gun - seriously. My "BB guns" are guaranteed a contemptuous sneer wherever I go.Thank you both for sharing your expertise! My HW99S (50S) at 10.5 fpe is a breeze to cock, pinkie easy, but then again, I’m a big bloke who never skips arm day. Mine's been tuned (not by me, of course), so perhaps that makes a difference.
I didn’t mean to start a debate about the HW30 vs. HW50S—I just wanted to give the poster a heads-up. Personally, going from a 50 to a 30, unless you're after a short-range plinker, seems like a step down?
Maybe there’s a cultural difference at play here. In my neck of the woods, the HW30 is considered a junior’s rifle, the sort of thing you buy for your kids as a starter. Honestly, if I showed up at the range with a 30 and told the lads I’d swapped it for a 99/50, they’d have a field day taking the mickey out of me for the next 12 months! But we're just a bunch of ignorant English countryside lads, so what do we know, aye?
Ha, I hear ya. Here in east Tennessee, Daisys are toddler toys and grade-school kids get rimfires as their starter gun - seriously. My "BB guns" are guaranteed a contemptuous sneer wherever I go.
BUT...a friend of mine put an adjustable buttplate and diopter sights on his tuned HW 30, with which he can shame me offhand at 10 meters no matter what rifle I use. That might give the fellows at your range something to think about!
Well, at least that's something no one has to worry about on this side of the pond. None of the people here that look down on airguns see any difference between 6 and 12 foot pounds. So far as they're concerned they're all just BB guns.Lol, I feel your pain! I wish I could, but those cheeky blighters at the range aren't going to be impressed by an adjustable buttplate and diopter sights, even if I could shoot the wings off a fly at 30 meters. It's a bit like when they roasted me for ordering a cosmopolitan at the pub instead of a stout. I do fancy a girly drink, but I never dared to order one until I saw David Beckham sipping one—he's a proper bloke’s bloke, isn't he? But even that didn’t help my case. Secretly, though, I’d still order one!
Cultural differences or not. I'd never worry if people consider a 30 a junior gun. I have 113 acres in Arkansas and shoot anything I want shoot off my back deck to 625 yards. I shoot my 22LR out to 320 yards almost daily. My 223s and my 6.5 creedmore go the rest of the way several times a week. I have nothing to prove to anyone. I don't care how anyone might perceive me shooting my little 30s. That's saying alot here in Arkansas where there's no gun restrictions and kids usually skip air rifles entirely.Thank you both for sharing your expertise! My HW99S (50S) at 10.5 fpe is a breeze to cock, pinkie easy, but then again, I’m a big bloke who never skips arm day. Mine's been tuned (not by me, of course), so perhaps that makes a difference.
I didn’t mean to start a debate about the HW30 vs. HW50S—I just wanted to give the poster a heads-up. Personally, going from a 50 to a 30, unless you're after a short-range plinker, seems like a step down?
Maybe there’s a cultural difference at play here. In my neck of the woods, the HW30 is considered a junior’s rifle, the sort of thing you buy for your kids as a starter. Honestly, if I showed up at the range with a 30 and told the lads I’d swapped it for a 99/50, they’d have a field day taking the mickey out of me for the next 12 months! But we're just a bunch of ignorant English countryside lads, so what do we know, aye?
Amazing!Cultural differences or not. I'd never worry if people consider a 30 a junior gun. I have 113 acres in Arkansas and shoot anything I want shoot off my back deck to 625 yards. I shoot my 22LR out to 320 yards almost daily. My 223s and my 6.5 creedmore go the rest of the way several times a week. I have nothing to prove to anyone. I don't care how anyone might perceive me shooting my little 30s. That's saying alot here in Arkansas where there's no gun restrictions and kids usually skip air rifles entirely.
In the end all my Weihrauchs are BB guns to me too. I still enjoy shooting them no matter how they're perceived. I learned a long time ago a real man never worries about proving it to anyone. He's his own person. Oh BTW I'm man enough to admit that I couldn't pinkie cock my 50 without chancing it slipping away from me.
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I think everyone needs to own a HW30 to understand what a cool little, accurate plinker it is.I sort of disagree. If I could only have one airgun it'd be my 177 Hw50. However I enjoy shooting my 177 hw30s much more. Any one of them gets used more than my 50. Only thing the 50 does better is pest. Even then my 30s have killed more incidental Gray squirrels out to 25 yards than my 50 has deliberately out to 40 yards. Those are my self imposed range limits for each.
The 50 is a wonderful does everthing well gun but it can't replace a 30. The 30 is just a pure joy to shoot and at least as accurate. My 30s usually best my 50 and they can hang with my 97 out to 25-30 yards. Amazing little guns.