Having serviced springers for over 35 yrs I say for sure that both can be equally accurate if properly setup and adjusted!!! Some cheap breal barrels are out of adjustment when they are made, but most all good quality breakbarrels will be just as accurate. Over timeva break varrel may need some minor adjusting to keep barrel tension adjusted properly but that isca simple process. For ultra precision shooting then a fixed barrel might have an edge but for general shooting even field target competition there will be no noticible difference. I competed with both for many years and while my personal preference is a fixed barrel, my break barrel did just as well. I am refering to quality break barrels here, not cheap under a 100 dollar break barrels !!
maybe in YOUR hands lola 760 pumpmaster shooting bb's out of a smooth bore is more accurate than most break barrels lol ...
Hey, Airshot. I liked your comments. I have a magnum break barrel with nitro piston in .22, with a Walther barrel. I've made a number of custom mods and really live this rifle but from my tests co-witnessing barrel mounted lasers with receiver mounted scope, I've identified the breach pivot as the weak link. The return lock isn't a sufficient detent to ensure the barrel returns to the same point after cocking each time. If I physically settle the barrel upward just prior to every shot, then it's not so bad. It just seems like the rest of the rifles capabilities are being limited by that aspect in this particular case. Not sure if a smith could improve it but that's what drew my attention to the underlevers. I love the power of this gun and use 21g pellets to slow it down for best accuracy. Having trouble finding underlever designs in .22 with anything comparable for fps or fpe. What's your take?Having serviced springers for over 35 yrs I say for sure that both can be equally accurate if properly setup and adjusted!!! Some cheap breal barrels are out of adjustment when they are made, but most all good quality breakbarrels will be just as accurate. Over timeva break varrel may need some minor adjusting to keep barrel tension adjusted properly but that isca simple process. For ultra precision shooting then a fixed barrel might have an edge but for general shooting even field target competition there will be no noticible difference. I competed with both for many years and while my personal preference is a fixed barrel, my break barrel did just as well. I am refering to quality break barrels here, not cheap under a 100 dollar break barrels !!
YES. TOTALLY AGREE. Some of my practice sessions are "trigger" days. It's the main focus of that session. Thats why ive gone so far as to wind my own springs. Trigger tuning has made a huge difference for me with springers.I belive in any spring or gas piston rifle, triggers are so important and so is lock time. Weather it's a break barrel or fixed barrel tune your trigger practice with it and get that lock up time down to a quick thud, u will be money
.17 hmr is a good choice. My el cheapo savage shoots 1” groups at 100 yards and drops them on the spot with a head, neck, or chest shot out to 75 yards.If worried about neighbors and animals then consider a 17HMR. The bullet explodes on a leaf so no worries of a ricochet. Not so with a pellet. Use a suppressor and then the only sound is the ballistic crack from breaking the sound barrier but a pellet will do that to.
Some of the truest words ever posted on AGN. I've rolled these thoughts around in my head with PCP vs springer. There's no doubt I'm more accurate off a rest with my PCP. But that's because I can rest the PCP in a different, and more favorable, manner than the springer. So, you're not really proving any inherent accuracy differences between power plants. Anecdotal evidence like 1st and 2nd place both shooting under levers is just that. Just a small sample of things you'd need to control to prove springer vs under lever accuracy: 1) Gun optimization. Stock screw and trigger guard tightness. Different for each gun, can be different for the same models between two guns. Power plant. has it been tuned properly? This affects accuracy also. Much more, but to impress me you'd need empirical evidence you had optimized each gun; 2) pellet choice. This gets fun. Easy to say I shot pellet "X" from both guns. Wonderful but we all know some guns favor certain pellets, so now you have to account for this. There are what, probably a hundred or more choices in a given caliber? Now I need empirical evidence that you selected the proper pellet for each gun. And that it was seated properly and consistently in each gun. And... 3) Trigger. How do you account for this? Same brand, same trigger is probably as close as you can get, but there are variations there too. How is the trigger being pulled? If it's a human hand then you've just introduced a margin of error that negates all your testing. So, now we need a robotic arm that can pull the trigger in precisely the same manner for both guns. This list could go on forever, but like Mycapt65 said it's just fruitless. The best you can come up with is a gun that works for you and under given conditions. Standing, off hand, I'll take my HW95 .22 over my Walther Maximathor .22 every time. Off a bench, money on the line, the Walther gets the nod. So, which is more accurate?Personally I think the concept of this thread and the other underlever/underpowered thread is just a lot of unnecessary mental masturbation.