Download free crosman 1077 pcp conversion for mac. Most Crosman air rifles come with a scope, but and that is about it as far as stock accessories.

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Technical Characteristics

Grimping pressure - 450 bar;
Working pressure without regulator - 200 bar;
Working pressure with regulator* - 300 bar; (*Regulators sold separately)
Velocity with stock Crosman spring/hammer/barrel - approx. .177 - 275m/s; .22 - 250m/s

Made from Materials

PCP tube OD 40mm - Aircraft grade aluminum;
Sound Moderator OD 25mm - Aircraft grade aluminum;
Barrel Band - Aircraft grade aluminum;
Valve - Hardened steel + Caprolon;
Fill Adapter - Brass;

Tools Required

  • Screwdrivers;
  • Hex keys;
  • Silicone grease for O-rings;

Installation Manual

Highly recommended to download Installation Manual and read the instructions before purchase.

Download

Note:Baofeng uv-5rx3 chirp. In order to properly install the PCP Kit you will need a minimum set of tools e.g. screwdrivers and hex keys and basic technical skills.

Write Your Own Review

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DISCLAIMER:do not take any responsibility for any injury, death or property damage caused by the above information and instructions. Meant for informational purposes only. Hiya, fellow DIYers and airgun enthusiasts! NK here with a quick pellet hack to increase pellet velocity in mid to high velocity springer (break barrel) air rifles. Spring air rifles work by pushing a spring into a locked position.

The spring is released and pushes a piston forward, propelling a pellet out of the barrel with air pressure. The sudden compression of air generates intense heat, like a fire piston. A diesel engine uses the same phenomenon to get its power-it compresses air in a cylinder and injects fuel. The fuel burns, creating a movement of the drive shaft. This principle can be harnessed for your pellet gun to increase muzzle velocity. (I suspect that in very rare cases that YOU SHOULD NOT TRY TO REPLICATE (You could lose your face.

I am dead serious.) I seem to be getting more than 2 inches of penetration on a log (similar to a.22 LR) from a.17 cal. This leads me to believe that the round was traveling in excess of 2,000 FPS,more than double gun's normal power.) You will need: Peanut oil or vegetable oil Pellets Paper towel Alliteration! 3 P's Springer/breakbarrel gun (Yes, nitro piston/gas ram (NOT CO2) works too, and you guys with gas systems, you can beat the hell out of your 'spring' since it is just air, but you may damage seals. Otherwise, you may have few limits, aside from chamber rupture pressure.) Put a few drops of peanut or other pant, not petrol oil (petroleum based oils dissolve seals which takes time and money to fix) into a tin of pellets. Put pellets out on paper towel. Carefully dab off extra oil.

Load a pellet and fire. You should see some smoke when you fire. This is normal, and your gun probably does it naturally sometimes.

If you hear a very loud bang, either you have broken the sound barrier (common) or the oil has detonated (also common, and usually breaks sound barrier as well.) If your gun does not shoot over 100 fps normally, than this is bad. DO NOT DO THIS REGULARLY. It may be cool, but it is inaccurate, as the shock wave catches up with the pellet as it gets slower, making it tumble. It also can blow up barrels if repeated with a lot of fuel or very often.

In less extreme detonations, it may recock (bad) or break the spring and main seals (also bad. Duh.) So just towel them off again until you get smoke but not a very loud crack. If your pellet gun can shoot beyond the sound barrier with super light pellets, like raptors, than the loud sound is just a sonic boom and is fine. You should still tone down oil for accuracy's sake. If your gun can fire beyond sound barrier with normal lead pellets, than go ahead. You will be far enough above to get good accuracy with peanut oil. Probably better than without since the sonic boom takes longer to catch up to a faster pellet.

But unless your gun can do it with whatever pellets you are using sans oil, don't. If your gun can break sound barrier with ultralight, still don't, because this coupled with ultralight is bad for spring. You can do this with a gas ram system, however, since they have no spring to worry about. Safety:Never try putting fuel directly in the compression cylinder or barrel.

This could cause ruptures and serious injury. Be extra careful! This turns a pellet gun into a hybrid firearm! And as with all breakbarrels, load in pellet before cocking gun to avoid smooshing fingers. Tips: 1)Dry pellet by shaking and dumping on paper towel. Wipe off the inside of empty tin.

Put in tin and shake. Repeat until the pellets do not make a supersonic boom after firing ten shots. Shake tin avery five well aimed shots or every two very well aimed shots. Or just shake every two min. This re-disperses oil, resulting in more consistent muzzle velocity.

2)You will know a detonation when you hear one. It will usually come coupled with a supersonic crack, but unlike a normal supersonic crack, the initial bang is much louder. When a shot goes supersonic, two things make loud noises: the initial bang of gas escaping the muzzle, (that is the bang from a normal subsonic shit) The second bang is the shockwave behind the pellet. The shockwave is what causes destabilization, as mentioned earlier. Anyway, in a detonation, the initial bang is very loud. You will be able to tell these apart, almost certainly.

When a detonation occurs, a great deal of force is exerted. I have had one shot where the skirt of the pellet was separated from the head. The head rocketed forward and went through an incredible two inches of solid tree. The skirt Flew out as shrapnel, but a little bit was forced through the thin crack created by the barrel meeting the powerplant. Inside the gun. Avoid detonation. One more side note: The official definition of detonation is a combustion reaction that propagates faster than the speed of sound in a given substrate.

I am not sure if this is what happens during and airgun 'detonation', but this is the most widely used term. If it were a true detonation, the brisance (shattering ability) is high. This means that a work hardened or high carbon steel may fracture and fly off in a badly designed gun. I find it likely that it could indeed be a true detonation for two reasons: the gas all reaches ignition temperature at almost exactly the same time. This results in an incredibly fast ignition, and possibly a detonation. Reason two is that a gas deflagration (burn) can breach the sound barrier when it encounters turbulence (such as the constriction from pressure cylinder to barrel, as well as the skirt of pellet. Also, the chamber is so small by the time the gas ignites from that the flame probably rebounds across the chamber at unimaginable speed.

I had learned something similar in college at TRU, (Texas Redneck University). It started with a redneck who shot WD40 on and in his pellet rifle, and proceeded to take back the West from the anti-gunners of the future. At least that's what they taught usgrin anyway WD40 increased the 8.3gr roundnose pellet speed from 955fps to on average, 1448fps per my own little cheapo but accurate chronometer.

This was done using a older Crossman Fury nitro-gas single pump airgun. Thanks for explaining somethings I didn't quite understand, and in a very easy to understand format that made exploring the subject a pleasurable expeirence leaving you with only wanting more.

So great job and make some more, Thanks! For those inquiring about if this also works for this and that type, here is a good safe rule to follow:1)Place your substance on the pellet and in the opening of the barrell. 2) Load and fire as normal. 3) if when you pull the trigger, the gun fires normally abiet much louder and more powerful than ever before, and does not explode in your hand, then it should be fine to use it.

(and I am not an official like endorser or anything, actually am an official, nothing! As an expert regarding weapons, I ask you to refrain from this practice. First of all.will you ruin your airgun? If the answer is NO don't do it. The barrel of an airgun is NOT designed for any other thing than the air pressure developed by the mechanism in the gun. Exceeding this pressure IS dangerous and can cause the barrel to blow up in your face.

The seal on a modern airgun is made out of synthetics. Ever held a match to plastic? That's what's going to happen if you intentionally cause combustion inside the air chamber.the seal will melt.! Repeatable shooting pattern? You don't have a clue of how much of this stuff you put in there.

See, that's one more reason NOT to. Air rifles that fire lead ammo are self lubricating, after the first 1500 shots or so, a thin layer of lead will coat the barrel, allowing pellets to slip through the barrel easier. Napier pellet lube is just engine flush for cars, packaged in tiny bottles and charged the same amount as for a whole bottle of engine flush. Do not use any products of any kind to.lube pellets, not even vegetable based oils, I'm sure you've seen what happens when a frying pan gets too hot.

Plus, any kind of look on a pellet is going to get blown back through the transfer port, creating the conditions for detonation inside the cylinder, not a good idea. If you want your airgun to shoot faster, tune it, upgrade the spring and piston, and use light grain pellets. The only 'lube' needed for air rifles is on moving mechanical.parts, for that you should use lithium or moly grease, but very sparingly. Although it won't detonate, it will catch dust, fluff etc, and gunk up the mechanicals. The goal of this is not to lubricate the gun. It is to produce a detonation. This is a very easy (if damaging) way to increase pellet velocity as needed, while enabling you to keep sub-sonic velocity most of the time.

As I'm sure you know, as you are evidently very smart, pellets travelling supersonic speeds are rather unstable. Thus supersonic airguns are quite inaccurate.

The ability to raise speed to supersonic for a single shot (say, for vermin hunting) is useful. A full tuneup and spring replacement is a permanent change, and limits the range of capabilities. I would never do this on a several-hundred-dollar gun.

That would be a terrible idea. It's a fun trick for a low-end rig like the Beeman RS2, though. It's also worth noting that 1) most powerful airguns get a fair fraction of their power from dieseling (this was tested by comparing when charged with nitrogen vs air). 2) Light pellets can be just as bad for the gun as dieseling, and even less stable and 3) A spring replacement or gun-tuning requires a fair bit of skill, time, money and commitment. This is often impractical, especially if you only want supersonic velocities for a short time.