Would you explain please.
Would you explain please.Nitro pistons are barrel break, only 1 time.
Crosman Nitro Venom Air Rifle - Crosman BB Guns and Pellet GunsWould you explain please.
It is a manual break open barrel where the spring is compressed by moving the barrel downwards 90 degrees from the sight plane, thus when released, charges the air into the chamber. Not CO2. These are referred to as spring air. This type of air rifle does not hold a compressed charge of air like a pump up. The recoil is forwards as the spring is released.Stupid question, but is it pump or co2 powered?
Thanks, that explains it.It is a manual break open barrel where the spring is compressed by moving the barrel downwards 90 degrees from the sight plane, thus when released, charges the air into the chamber. Not CO2. These are referred to as spring air. This type of air rifle does not hold a compressed charge of air like a pump up. The recoil is forwards as the spring is released.
I would go for this, I never liked the spring air, felt wrong when it fired.Looking at parts diagrams I think the difference between spring-air rifles and nitro piston rifles is this - spring-air cocks a spring when you break the barrel, and when you pull the trigger it releases the spring which compresses the air at the same time it sends the pellet out the barrel. With a nitro piston it looks to me like it compresses the air when you break the barrel, and releases it when you pull the trigger. There's no big spring in a nitro piston rifle. Nitro piston is supposed to last longer because they don't rely on a spring that gets weaker over time. I might have to give one a try for my next air rifle.
I've had spring air rifles for years, and the only thing that's really objectionable about them is the recoil. I had a RWS model 54 side cocker that got around the recoil by allowing the entire action to move back and forth. It worked almost like an artillery piece, and while it eliminated the recoil and improved accuracy, it also cost around $500. Seems to me like the nitro piston guns shouldn't recoil like a spring air, and for a lot less money than the RWS setup. I'll be real interested to hear what Rob has to say about his new rifle's recoil.I would go for this, I never liked the spring air, felt wrong when it fired.
Hi debeardslee,I've had spring air rifles for years, and the only thing that's really objectionable about them is the recoil. I had a RWS model 54 side cocker that got around the recoil by allowing the entire action to move back and forth. It worked almost like an artillery piece, and while it eliminated the recoil and improved accuracy, it also cost around $500. Seems to me like the nitro piston guns shouldn't recoil like a spring air, and for a lot less money than the RWS setup. I'll be real interested to hear what Rob has to say about his new rifle's recoil.
Another problem with the spring air rifles is that you can tear them up by dry firing them. I'm also interested in whether or not the nitro pistons have the same issue.
I'm looking forward to Rob's range report when it's available.
They sure haven't been out long enough for a decade of evaluation, but I've got a year on a Nitro Piston gas spring Benjamin Titan GP .22 shown in this link. http://www.taurusarmed.net/forums/other-handguns/87075-bb-pistol-vs-22lr-plinking-2.html#post1158164I'm very curious how the piston rifles work vs the standard spring.
The thing is, both are springs. One is a metal coil spring and the Nitro Piston is a gas spring. Which is exactly how you describe that when you cock the barrel, you are compressing the gas (Nitrogen, I believe) inside the gas spring. That gas is at high pressure when cocked, when uncocked the gas spring still has the same amount of gas just not compressed as much. A gas spring is exactly what holds up the hatch or hood on a car. It's just that the Nitro Piston has a much higher spring rating than a gas spring that holds up a car trunk or hatch.Looking at parts diagrams I think the difference between spring-air rifles and nitro piston rifles is this - spring-air cocks a spring when you break the barrel, and when you pull the trigger it releases the spring which compresses the air at the same time it sends the pellet out the barrel. With a nitro piston it looks to me like it compresses the air when you break the barrel, and releases it when you pull the trigger. There's no big spring in a nitro piston rifle. Nitro piston is supposed to last longer because they don't rely on a spring that gets weaker over time. I might have to give one a try for my next air rifle.
I suck at artillery hold for these type of guns. From seeing things on the internet, most people must be able to master it.I did want to mention that the manual for this air rifle strongly suggests using the "Artillery Hold" when shooting it for best accuracy.
It states that spring-load and nitro piston breakbarrel airguns move in all directions when fired due to the power generated when the action of the piston ring is being shoved forward by either the mainspring, or the nitrogen-filled gas ram.
Here are a few clips that explain this in detail.
Artillery Hold for Air Rifles - YouTube
Spring Air Accuracy - YouTube
I use the same kind of hold as I do when shooing a firearm. If I'm standing I pull it back into the pocket of my shoulder with my firing hand. My non firing hand is harder to describe - if you covered your mouth with your left hand with your thumb on the left and your fingers on the right, and then moved your hand forward about a foot, that's the way I hold my non-firing hand. I set the front of the rifle in the 'V' formed between by non-firing thumb and index finger, and the elbow of my non-firing arm goes right against my body, and buttresses the rifle. It's a hold I learned many moons ago from a Sniper School graduate. He basically said you want to keep as much of your non firing hand off the rifle as possible.I suck at artillery hold for these type of guns. From seeing things on the internet, most people must be able to master it.
For me, and I had to learn this the hard way, I have to hold the rifle firmly into my shoulder while keeping the fore end consistently supported. I only use firm back pressure with my trigger hand, yet I do only lightly grip the fore end. If I do that the same way every time, I can sight in a break barrel air rifle successfully and hit 1" targets at 25 yards regurlarly with aperture sights or with a scope.
I am not good enough with a break barrel to out shoot a good rimfire rifle though. Although, I'm sure many air rifle shooters can.![]()
I like the way you think. :icon_cool:
They make a few models with different options like the black, wood and different camo options. Old model barrel breaks are spring loaded which have a loud 'BOING' sound. The Nitro piston is gas operated which gives the same velocity but at much less noise. As far as scopes I wouldn't worry, I have a cheap air rifle scope on my .22 LR and it will hold 1" at 100 yards.Hi ozzy,
I looked at that. That one has the wooden stocks, and not a real clear mention of the scope.
Here is the site that I found the model I purchased from.
Cabela's: Crosman Nitro Venom Dusk .177-Caliber Rifle