Ignition Override
Member
When there are no holes in a large cardboard box from six feet away, after charging the gun (decent resistance) and pulling the trigger, one then concludes that the pellet never went out the bore.
This beauty looks basically brand new. Naturally I gently use a very narrow cleaning rod to then push each pellet out the bore-before loading the next pellet.
The only ammo came in an old silvery round tin with the gun: " 4.5 mm / .177 euSta , ****(?) Wrage, Made in western Germany". The pellets easily roll downhill on a smooth surface.
Hardly a scratch anywhere on this gun; the bore has a brilliant shine as if it recently was nib. Pellets are gently inserted into the chamber s seen in several videos, but the compressed air pushes a pellet approx. 1/4 -1/3 the distance of the bore.
With (naturally) an empty chamber while feeling whichever amount of air come out the muzzle, I'm baffled whether a gun with so little wear could have an internal leak.
Each of about a dozen pellets (one at a time) were loaded exactly as seen in this video, and of course the barrel locked securely back into place, with the safety button pushed fully fwd. each time before pulling that trigger thingy.
Google searches have nothing about any sort of low gas pressure in the chamber. It only cost me $100.
This beauty looks basically brand new. Naturally I gently use a very narrow cleaning rod to then push each pellet out the bore-before loading the next pellet.
The only ammo came in an old silvery round tin with the gun: " 4.5 mm / .177 euSta , ****(?) Wrage, Made in western Germany". The pellets easily roll downhill on a smooth surface.
Hardly a scratch anywhere on this gun; the bore has a brilliant shine as if it recently was nib. Pellets are gently inserted into the chamber s seen in several videos, but the compressed air pushes a pellet approx. 1/4 -1/3 the distance of the bore.
With (naturally) an empty chamber while feeling whichever amount of air come out the muzzle, I'm baffled whether a gun with so little wear could have an internal leak.
Each of about a dozen pellets (one at a time) were loaded exactly as seen in this video, and of course the barrel locked securely back into place, with the safety button pushed fully fwd. each time before pulling that trigger thingy.
Google searches have nothing about any sort of low gas pressure in the chamber. It only cost me $100.
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