Congratulations on the new gun. What caliber did you get?
Mark, it's common knowledge that Weihrauchs are more difficult to disassemble than other makes, starting on from taking the barrel off and putting it back on. Dianas are a breeze and Walthers are stupid easy in comparison. Of course easy is relative, and someone who swears by Wiehrauchs also swears they are pretty easy.
I have taken apart a Hatsan, and agree it's among the hairier ones. I feel it kind of goes with the territory of having the World's Most Powerful springer at a low cost from a far flung land. The HW95 is a midrange, high-dollar, centerfold superstar in comparison, but when I learned what it takes to just take the barrel off and on, balancing the barreled action into my spring compressor, whittling exactamundo dummy pins etc., I was pretty miffed. None of my other dozen springers are like that, no matter the cost. Barrel removal or reattachment is a 30 second job, with no need for other than common screwdrivers.
"When I learned what it takes to just take the barrel off and on, balancing the barreled action into my spring compressor, whittling exactamundo dummy pins etc., I was pretty miffed."
It is patently obvious that working on Weihrauchs makes it easier to work on Weihrauchs. Myself, having worked on some 20 different springers over the past 30 years, but most in the last five, have observed that most airguns, and especially other German airguns, are far more intuitive and straightforward to tear down and service. For instance, Walthers are so beautifully easy to dismantle, it actively promotes tweaking and testing. Not so with the HW's. HW fans accept this and other HW downsides, and so be it.
This isn't rocket science.