Scopes on an air rifle?

Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
1,132
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
Thinking about adding an air rifle to my practice.

This would allow me to shoot more, cheaper, and play with more drop and wind at shorter ranges. Going past 300 is a challenge around here.

I'm not looking at a PCP rifle. I know they're the gold standard. I know they're super duper awesome. I also know they're approaching the cost of a. 22 and I need a compressor or a SCUBA tank to keep it shooting and continual refills.

I'm looking at a Nitro piston rifle for simplicity and for price.

This is in optics because I want know if you'd buy a special "air rifle" scope or just put a scope on it?

I understand the recoil issue with springers and understand that it's an issue with the gas piston rifles as well, just to a lesser degree.
 
A big springer can eat a Burris in an afternoon of shooting. I’ve done it.
And not “I don’t think it’s holding zero anymore “, I mean “now it rattles inside and the crosshair is crooked “.

You need a scope rated for an air rifle, at the very least. An airgun specific scope is a better bet.

However, you’ll get some shots out of a scope on a nitro gun, so it just depends on how much you are going to shoot it.
 
A big springer can eat a Burris in an afternoon of shooting. I’ve done it.
And not “I don’t think it’s holding zero anymore “, I mean “now it rattles inside and the crosshair is crooked “.

You need a scope rated for an air rifle, at the very least. An airgun specific scope is a better bet.

However, you’ll get some shots out of a scope on a nitro gun, so it just depends on how much you are going to shoot it.
So, no. Don't put the Burris on an air rifle.

Thank you.

Once zeroed, I had the idea to build a "minisniping" range and shoot 30-50 per session a couple times a week
 
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