I know most say leave the regulator alone and only adjust the hammer spring.I almost never shoot beyond 60 yards and don't plan to shoot the 34 g pellets. I was originally shooting the 25.4's around 940 fps and getting 38-40 shots on a 3500 psi fill. I didn't see any need for that speed/power at 40-60 yards. My goal was to shoot in the 880 fps range. When I tried reducing the power with the hs anywhere near that speed I had a fairly large spike at the end of the string and shot count only improved by about 4-5 shots with the 3500 psi same fill. After some serious thought (the gun is practically new) I tackled the regulator. Turns out it's really pretty easy to get out and adjust, only real issue was having to take it out multiple times and readjust the collar on the regulator (if you've watched Ernest's video you now what I'm referring to). It took several, several, several times to get it down to my goal. I'm now shooting 875-885 range getting over 50 shots with a 3300 psi fill. I can get 40 shots only filling to 3000 psi, I'm really pleased. In case anyone is interested I'll mention a couple of things. First watch Ernest's video on the Taipan regulator, I went back to it repeatedly during the whole process. I will say this, Ernest recommends moving the regulator collar one hole at a time. One hole at a time has very little effect on the regulator, trust me I know (now). I lost count of how much I moved the collar, but I'd guess 8-10 holes, I got pretty good at taking the gun apart (an wasting a lot of air and pellets)
. Another thing that most people (other than me) would think to do: take the linkage rod loose from the trigger assembly, and don't over tighten the screws on the trigger assembly cover when you're finished. They can be a bear to get out if you over torque them. Screwing a small metric bolt into the end of the regulator makes it super easy to remove. I'm not sure what size it is, I found one in my misc bolts.
