Page 8 of 11 - Air Pistols
Hammerli AP20 PRO
$1,129.99
Beeman 2027
$169.99
Air Arms Alfa Proj
$1,199.99
Hammerli AP20
$899.99
Morini 162MI
$1,999.99
SIG Sauer X-FIVE ASP
$139.99
Morini CM 200EI
$2,599.99
Browning Buck Mark URX
$49.99
Weihrauch HW 75
$529.99
Crosman 2300S
$349.99
Air Venturi V10 Kit
$289.99
Crosman P1 Full Auto
$169.99
Diana LP8
$319.99
Air Pistol Powerplants
Here's an overview of how various popular types of powerplants work:
A single pump air pistol requires one stroke of the lever to charge and cock it before shooting. One pump can achieve extremely high velocities at the cost of being slightly harder to pump than a multi-pump pneumatic. Pistols in this category include entry-level plinkers all the way up to 10-meter competition pistols.
Pneumatic air pistols have a cocking lever that lets you choose the power of your shots based on the number of pumps. More pumps mean more pressure and velocity, but be sure not to go over the recommended number.
Pistols that use CO2 deliver an exciting shooting experience without the high costs of traditional ammunition. Most use a single 12-gram cartridge, and they can feature realistic blowback action. It is often used to power a semi-auto air pistol, and many come in the form of a multi-shot air pistol or air gun revolver and use magazines and BB or pellet cartridges.
King of the compressed air pistols, precharged guns or pcp air pistols feature an air tank that must be filled with a high-pressure compressor, hand pump or carbon fiber tank. The advantages are enormous! With large onboard reservoirs, you can fire shot after shot before needing to top off. These versions make impressive hunting air pistol and target practice guns, as well as some of the best competition guns in the market.