I received a BRK/Brocock Pathfinder in 22 caliber early last week. It arrived with an air leak.What is this red band on the cocking lever? Looks Cool Can i please have the link to it? Thanks!
I've watched many YouTube videos about the Pathfinder and they all omitted a material fact: Brocock "locks" the hammer spring, so when one tries to tune the Pathfinder by adjusting the hammer spring, you'll find that the hammer adjustment screw will not rotate in clockwise or counterclockwise. Accordingly, I could not tune my Pathfinder which is a nonstarter for me. I have come to understand that Brocock/BRK placed some "plastic screws" in place to prevent the hammer from being adjusted, but I was also informed that the "plastic screws" could be removed. I was told that Brocock/BRK sets the regulator and the hammer with THEY believe it should be. How could that be true? Because the tune is dependent upon the projectile that you're using.
This is not an inexpensive gun. It's a premium PCP. I have three FX PCPs, an FX Panthera 600mm in .22, an FX Panthera Hunter Compact in .22 and an FX Maverick in .22 and .30. The Pathfinder, IMHO, is not even in the same league as my FX PCPs.
If you are looking for a compact, folding stock, accurate and TUNABLE PCP, have a look at the FX Panthera Hunter Compact with the shot-to-shot consistency of a dynamic block.
I returned the Pathfinder to Airguns of Arizona due to it being defective (leak) and the undisclosed lack of hammer spring adjustment. I had to pay for the return shipping, more than $80 via UPS Ground from CT to AZ.
My prior experience with Airguns of Arizona has been very positive and they have an excellent reputation. The fact that the Pathfinder leaked is not their fault. (IMHO), nor is the undisclosed fact that the hammer spring should not be adjusted or could not be adjusted a failure of Airguns Arizona. That material omission is the fault of every Pathfinder reviewer that I could find on YouTube.
Haven't you heard that "everything on the Internet is true?"
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