I have the Canadian version 480fps with lead once I got the scope it came with zeroed in I made a 4 mag group (36 shots) using Stoeger x-hunt 8.64 grain at 20 yards that a nickel could cover. This gun is very accurate IMO, I did order a Pinty 3-9x40 illuminated range finder scope to do it justice. I would have no problem going after squirrels or rabbits with it, shot placement, finding the pellets that work best and knowing your range limits make all difference in the world, a dime placed in between the caplets makes sure both are punctuated with ease
So let me get this straight. After inserting the 2 CO2 cartridges I can only keep those cartridges pressurized a short amount of time before damaging the rubber air seals? So if I only shoot 12 times in a session after that I must remove the new C02 cartridges the same day even though I still have 20 shots available? That can get expensive very quickly. The only way around this is to purchase an adaptor for an 88g CO2 cartridge cylinder, and use 88g cartridges which I can unscrew with the adaptor in place and be able to save the CO2 remaining in the 88g cartridge cylinder? I have read that I can insert a dead CO2 cartridge 1st, and then a new one and be able to use only one cartridge at a time per instance instead of having to waste 2 in one session. Can I leave the expended cartridge in the CO2 chamber, and just rotate out the full CO2 cartridge when I plan on using the air gun each morning or afternoon. This is a serious engineering flaw without a doubt. The only way around it is to use the adaptor, and an 88g cartridge cylinder in order to be able to use the same CO2 cartridge multiple times on different days.
The tighten down pin pierces the nose-out capsule but requires it to be fired blank to pierce the nose-first capsule. The dime may push the first capsule in too far and seal it there preventing gas from the second capsule from reaching the valve properly.
Diana chaser kit in either. 22 or .177 is a better deal than that. For $129.00 you get a co2 pistol, a longer rifle barrell, a shoulder stock, barrell band, singleshot tray, silencer. The chaser platform is easily modified to get more power. More accurate than the fusion 2.
I bought a F2 for the same reason. I've only used springers and was uncertain about committing to a PCP (still am ) and all the extra expense of a compressor/ scuba tank and no, I'm not going to use a hand pump, air gunning is supposed to be fun and pumping is no fun at all. I only paid $124 for my F2, an affordable introduction to recoilless air gunning. I like it for what it is, not fantastically accurate, no recoil or spring noise but to be honest. having used springers for so long that's what I'm going to stick with. Springers are easy to maintain, repair and need nothing extra to make them go combined with a practiced technique to shoot it well.
Not for target shooting, lmao don’t listen to this guy. Great gun for pest control, great gun for target practice. All around good gun for the price point
ruclips.net/video/-gRJW1v9sAc/видео.html idk about yours but this guy's fushion 2 looks and works pretty well. maybe you have a defective one? but at the end the groups you put up at the end looked pretty good to me. maybe you are expecting too much out of it since it's a budget gun?
I have the Canadian version 480fps with lead once I got the scope it came with zeroed in I made a 4 mag group (36 shots) using Stoeger x-hunt 8.64 grain at 20 yards that a nickel could cover. This gun is very accurate IMO, I did order a Pinty 3-9x40 illuminated range finder scope to do it justice. I would have no problem going after squirrels or rabbits with it, shot placement, finding the pellets that work best and knowing your range limits make all difference in the world, a dime placed in between the caplets makes sure both are punctuated with ease
So let me get this straight. After inserting the 2 CO2 cartridges I can only keep those cartridges pressurized a short amount of time before damaging the rubber air seals? So if I only shoot 12 times in a session after that I must remove the new C02 cartridges the same day even though I still have 20 shots available? That can get expensive very quickly. The only way around this is to purchase an adaptor for an 88g CO2 cartridge cylinder, and use 88g cartridges which I can unscrew with the adaptor in place and be able to save the CO2 remaining in the 88g cartridge cylinder?
I have read that I can insert a dead CO2 cartridge 1st, and then a new one and be able to use only one cartridge at a time per instance instead of having to waste 2 in one session. Can I leave the expended cartridge in the CO2 chamber, and just rotate out the full CO2 cartridge when I plan on using the air gun each morning or afternoon. This is a serious engineering flaw without a doubt. The only way around it is to use the adaptor, and an 88g cartridge cylinder in order to be able to use the same CO2 cartridge multiple times on different days.
The tighten down pin pierces the nose-out capsule but requires it to be fired blank to pierce the nose-first capsule. The dime may push the first capsule in too far and seal it there preventing gas from the second capsule from reaching the valve properly.
Did those red fire pallets fit in the magazine?
How does it load the next pellet in?
My fusion 2 has bin excellent in the freezing temps in New York for the price
I target shoot with mine 9 shots at 25 yards and I get dime sized groping you must have a defective one
Diana chaser kit in either. 22 or .177 is a better deal than that. For $129.00 you get a co2 pistol, a longer rifle barrell, a shoulder stock, barrell band, singleshot tray, silencer. The chaser platform is easily modified to get more power. More accurate than the fusion 2.
I bought a F2 for the same reason. I've only used springers and was uncertain about committing to a PCP (still am ) and all the extra expense of a compressor/ scuba tank and no, I'm not going to use a hand pump, air gunning is supposed to be fun and pumping is no fun at all. I only paid $124 for my F2, an affordable introduction to recoilless air gunning. I like it for what it is, not fantastically accurate, no recoil or spring noise but to be honest. having used springers for so long that's what I'm going to stick with. Springers are easy to maintain, repair and need nothing extra to make them go combined with a practiced technique to shoot it well.
Not for target shooting, lmao don’t listen to this guy. Great gun for pest control, great gun for target practice. All around good gun for the price point
ruclips.net/video/-gRJW1v9sAc/видео.html idk about yours but this guy's fushion 2 looks and works pretty well. maybe you have a defective one? but at the end the groups you put up at the end looked pretty good to me. maybe you are expecting too much out of it since it's a budget gun?