Posted on 12/04/2025 6:55:35 AM PST by marktwain

That's without getting into Dennis Quackenbush,* who builds air rifles up to .50-cal, and which have been used to take American buffalo, black bear and African plains game.
http://www.quackenbushairguns.com/index.htm
* No, he didn't get his name from a Groucho Marx character. In fact he is distant relation to H.M. Quackenbush, who built airguns in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Quackenbush
They were Girandoni air rifles, which became their primary meat-getters because they were quieter, didn't leave a tell-tale gunpowder smell, and didn't delete their precious stockpile of black powder.
Thomas Jefferson owned a Girandoni, and he made sure Lewis & Clark had two.
For a time, the Girandoni was the primary infantry weapon of the Austrian Army. You could reload it from the prone position (until the air charge ran out) and was impervious to rain, so it had some material advantages over a black powder flintlock.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girardoni_air_rifle
Girandonis fired a ball from (roughly) 150 to 200 grains at about 800 fps. So power-wise, it was neck-and-neck with a standard velocity .38 Special.
Which is A TON more power than a "very low powered BB guns."
It would be nice if folks would read an entire post before responding to it.
Oh, well ...
People around here (too many of them, anyway) are too damn dumb to read an article before making a knee-jerk response to the headline.
I have my late father's Crossman 600. Unfortunately, the seals are shot, and it dumps Co2 as soon as you pierce the cylinder. He was on a shooting team, and used the 600 to practice in the backyard. I really need to either fix it myself or send it off for repair.
I have a .22 cal. pellet rifle, a U.S.-made Benjamin Marauder. It has slightly less power than a .22 Short round, with a muzzle velocity of about 850-900 feet per second and a projectile weight of about 20 grains. Small but potentially deadly... you should be just as careful with airguns as you would with a firearm.
That’s a shame.
One of mine was sent out to Crosman in the late 1970s to have the seals redone. Still have all the correspondence from that in the box.
The other just keeps on working fine!
They are still in business!
Maybe Crosman will still service the 600! Worth a try!
I believe it’s the early model of the air ordinance SMG .22. I’m not at home or I’d go look.
I was looking on line to send you a link and they still have them where you can use co2, Nitro, or compressed air to run it but it looks like they throttled the velocity down to 650fps to qualify to sell in Canada.
Mine is the older one at 1150fps. You can still buy the used ones, but they’re expensive. Look to be $3k. I paid $650 or something like that. More than 500 and less than $1k, anyway.
There’s a little tool and you just shake the pellets in and then press them into the belt. Takes about 5 minutes to load 300 which is what fits in the magazine.
I know it’s just a pellet gun, but shooting 300 .22 rounds into someone sure as hell would kill them.
Haven’t checked but there has to be a rechargeable electrical portable compressor that one can use in the field. Or an apparatus that allows multiple co2 canisters to recharge the guns compressed air reservoir. I’ve seen commercials on tv for portable air pressure tools that look like a cheap drill hooked up to a device which compresses air to refill a flat tire.
If not...someone could easily invent one. IMHO
Well, we were talking about Lewis and Clark’s air rifles, not modern pre-charged pneumatic (PCP) guns, so they didn’t have portable rechargeable electric anything. There are hand pumps that will get modern PCPs up to pressure, but it’s a lot of work. Those tire-inflators won’t do you any good at all, since PCP reservoir pressures go into the thousands of psi.
It’s much leaner and better for you. There are so many deer where we live, I could eat venison several times a week, and I am going to start shooting some again, since the price of beef is crazy.
Why would they want to do that?? The pioneers and settlers went to a lot of trouble to get rid of them
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.