Snagged this refurbished Hatsan spring 95 last summer for $99. It came pre scratched and the safety wouldn't work right, shot it some then set it aside as a project. Got it out few weeks back and started shooting, smoked pretty good and groups looked more like a shotgun. After couple hundred rounds 'break in' it had quieted down and some groups looked promising. I went through it a little---Got the safety working right, cleaned the barrel, loctite screws, put a cheek pad and scope on it. Some shade tree 'smithing took the trigger down from 6# to a little under 3#. Chrono shows 10.3 gr running at 866 fps with 15 ES and 5 SD, no complaints there. Now 5 shot groups holding around 3/4"@25 yds and 2"@50 yds. Obviously group sizes are double my Weihrauch and Air Arms, but for $100 seems like a great deal to me.
On my rifles with the Quattro trigger I have only replaced the most forward screw. I took the factory screws out and used the next size longer. I used m3x14x0.5 socket head cap screw if I remember correctly and it worked perfectly but I rounded the end of the screw with my Dremel using a stone and polished it with my Dremel using a buffing wheel and jeweler's rouge . It doesn't take much more length to make a much lighter trigger. Be very careful as you can render the trigger unsafe.
Hi DeecoI have a helpfull suggestion for you to consider sir.If you put a longer triggger adjustment screw in your Quatro trigger, then it's a good idea to add a lock nut to secure the longer screw.Once you get it where you want it, locking it down will go a long way in preventing mishaps in the future. The factory cap screws once bottomed out cannot creep any further in, but a longer screw can.Too much adjustment (and or screw creep) on the longer screw can possibly result in a bent barrel, because the barrel snaps shut. Anyways sir, that's what I did with my Hatsan 125's.Best Wishes - Tom
I've seen a lot of unsafe trigger "work" so here's my disclaimer. If you don't know what you're doing, take it to someone who does.
Should be able to in the kitchen sink and just be careful but that's pure guess since I never tried.
Quote from: SteveP-52 on April 19, 2022, 03:50:34 PMShould be able to in the kitchen sink and just be careful but that's pure guess since I never tried.Its not like your offered a bag full of replacments or cant find how you keep them cleaned up. ...lol. You know they get pretty dirty .. maybe best to just remove them and keep the hair curler things in standalone?..lol
Quote from: A moron on April 19, 2022, 05:55:58 PMQuote from: SteveP-52 on April 19, 2022, 03:50:34 PMShould be able to in the kitchen sink and just be careful but that's pure guess since I never tried.Its not like your offered a bag full of replacments or cant find how you keep them cleaned up. ...lol. You know they get pretty dirty .. maybe best to just remove them and keep the hair curler things in standalone?..lolHobby synthetic felt is in my Sniper suppressors. Hand wash dish soap, air dry, resuse, or cut new piece(s) from anyone selling felt sheets about the same thickness. Cost is few bucks for a dozen sheets which comes down to pennies per rifle.