Quote from: Hoosier Daddy on November 12, 2022, 10:53:23 AMQuote from: kerplunk on November 12, 2022, 09:09:39 AM I'm going to break her in with a tin of CPHPs first, about 100 down and 400 left to go! Bare in mind... CPHPs are not soft lead and may leave residue that is hard to remove and foul the accuracy of "Good" pellets later..Especially in an older gun that has been shot with the older real lead pellets. I would recommend a cheap RWS / H&N / JSB pellet for testing.Good looking out, thanks! No more CPHPs. It was surprisingly accurate with them, so I think it may be worth it to move to quality pellets already. Now to figure out what else I "need" from PA.
Quote from: kerplunk on November 12, 2022, 09:09:39 AM I'm going to break her in with a tin of CPHPs first, about 100 down and 400 left to go! Bare in mind... CPHPs are not soft lead and may leave residue that is hard to remove and foul the accuracy of "Good" pellets later..Especially in an older gun that has been shot with the older real lead pellets. I would recommend a cheap RWS / H&N / JSB pellet for testing.
I'm going to break her in with a tin of CPHPs first, about 100 down and 400 left to go!
Quote from: kerplunk on November 16, 2022, 08:58:10 AMQuote from: Hoosier Daddy on November 12, 2022, 10:53:23 AMQuote from: kerplunk on November 12, 2022, 09:09:39 AM I'm going to break her in with a tin of CPHPs first, about 100 down and 400 left to go! Bare in mind... CPHPs are not soft lead and may leave residue that is hard to remove and foul the accuracy of "Good" pellets later..Especially in an older gun that has been shot with the older real lead pellets. I would recommend a cheap RWS / H&N / JSB pellet for testing.Good looking out, thanks! No more CPHPs. It was surprisingly accurate with them, so I think it may be worth it to move to quality pellets already. Now to figure out what else I "need" from PA.If Crosman pellets shoot good, why not shoot them? Some of my guns prefer them. If accuracy falls off, I clean the barrel and get back to shooting. Maybe I just never thought about it enough to notice one brand interferes with the accuracy of another. Perhaps I'll do an experiment about it someday....
The RWS Lockdown mount is made specifically for that rail (T01 has the same rail as current guns) and requires that little screw be removed.
I wouldn’t use that flat bladed screw as a stop. It was actually meant for diopter sights and if the scope mount slips there’s a chance it could shear off. Can definitely happen with 48/52 and I think the 34 probably has enough recoil to do it also. Notice how shallow the holes in the rail are on that gun? Either use a mount without a stop pin or be sure the end of the pin is flat if you do. They can ride up out of those shallow holes and damage the rail, and you can’t replace that rail.
That flat bladed screw is a scope stop. As long as it's a dove tail scope mount it will fit.
I’m not sure on that mount. I know it won’t work properly on my T05 trigger gun. From what DanD said the new (T06) guns have the same rail as the T01 guns like yours. If that’s the case I’d think it will work. Hopefully he weighs in and can say for sure.
From what I remember it’s the T01 and T05 rails that are most similar. I THOUGHT they had the same hole placement and same shallow holes. I’ll measure one of my T05 guns tonight and check length and hole placement. There are a few folks here who would know for sure. Maybe one of them will stop by.
Quote from: cjtamu on November 18, 2022, 11:30:19 AMFrom what I remember it’s the T01 and T05 rails that are most similar. I THOUGHT they had the same hole placement and same shallow holes. I’ll measure one of my T05 guns tonight and check length and hole placement. There are a few folks here who would know for sure. Maybe one of them will stop by.I measured stuff-The T01 and T06 guides both have stop pin holes 3 inches apart. The Lockdown mount fits them both with its 3 inch pin spread.