Quote from: MikeCarter on April 08, 2023, 05:39:04 PMQuote from: Acapulco on April 08, 2023, 05:11:13 PMI would buy the Notos. From what I've seen on the net...it looks to be a sweet shooter. Like to see it go up against the Leishy with 50 yrd groups.... Sorry Lol no comparison. Toyota Tacoma vs a Mercedes AMG G63.We owned a Mercedes and currently own a Tacoma, quite honestly, I'd take the Toyota over the Mercedes any day of the week! Had a lot of issues with the Mercedes!
Quote from: Acapulco on April 08, 2023, 05:11:13 PMI would buy the Notos. From what I've seen on the net...it looks to be a sweet shooter. Like to see it go up against the Leishy with 50 yrd groups.... Sorry Lol no comparison. Toyota Tacoma vs a Mercedes AMG G63.
I would buy the Notos. From what I've seen on the net...it looks to be a sweet shooter. Like to see it go up against the Leishy with 50 yrd groups....
Quote from: fixit on April 06, 2023, 09:16:27 PMI'm sure I'm opening a can of worms, but, if I were to choose between them, what are the pros and cons?I have neither, but I do have a recently tuned Artemis PP800R (in .177) (think of it as a regulated Diana Bandit) that is dressed in a Buck Rail pistol grip and a folding shoulder stock. I got mine from AirgunArcheryFun in Canada.I tuned the regulator down to 65-ish bars, clipped and collapsed a few coils of the hammer spring, and glued the hammer spring guide to the rear cap (this makes the hammer free flying). Also polished the trigger components and the matching surface on the hammer. The trigger grub screws are replaced with ball-head types.The trigger pull is now about 12 to 14 oz., shooting at 6 FPE (about 500 fps with JSB 10.34gr), and getting about 40 shots from 200 bars to 65 bars. The ES of muzzle velocity is very small. The accuracy is great, especially at this price point. A local enthusiast was able to shoot the .25 version of his at 12 FPE.The Brocock Ranger XR is *very* jealous of the little brother!If I am not mistaken, the Notos, the PP750, the PP800, the Diana Bandit are all variants of the same air pistol. So there you have one more data point related to the Notos!
I'm sure I'm opening a can of worms, but, if I were to choose between them, what are the pros and cons?
The Notos looks to me like a PP750 with a different stock & barrel. Has anyone directly compared these two ?
Quote from: sactargetshooter on April 08, 2023, 02:39:08 PMQuote from: fixit on April 06, 2023, 09:16:27 PMI'm sure I'm opening a can of worms, but, if I were to choose between them, what are the pros and cons?I have neither, but I do have a recently tuned Artemis PP800R (in .177) (think of it as a regulated Diana Bandit) that is dressed in a Buck Rail pistol grip and a folding shoulder stock. I got mine from AirgunArcheryFun in Canada.I tuned the regulator down to 65-ish bars, clipped and collapsed a few coils of the hammer spring, and glued the hammer spring guide to the rear cap (this makes the hammer free flying). Also polished the trigger components and the matching surface on the hammer. The trigger grub screws are replaced with ball-head types.The trigger pull is now about 12 to 14 oz., shooting at 6 FPE (about 500 fps with JSB 10.34gr), and getting about 40 shots from 200 bars to 65 bars. The ES of muzzle velocity is very small. The accuracy is great, especially at this price point. A local enthusiast was able to shoot the .25 version of his at 12 FPE.The Brocock Ranger XR is *very* jealous of the little brother!If I am not mistaken, the Notos, the PP750, the PP800, the Diana Bandit are all variants of the same air pistol. So there you have one more data point related to the Notos!I have both the Bandit and Notos, I see no similar parts at all.