My favorite air rifle is a FWB 124 in 177 calibre. Unfortunately it hasn't been made in 35 -40 years. The second is a FWB 300 match rifle also 177 calibre. Both are very accurate - the 300 is a controlled (recoils) recoil rifle. I also have a RWS (Diana) model 54 recoiless rifle in 177 which is also an excellent air rifle.
To correct a misconception - the artillery hold is to lay the forearm of the spring gun on your open hand or some soft object like a sand bag. Do not hold the forearm, just support it. Allow the gun to recoil naturally.This method is named for the recoil of artillery pieces. Tune to the History channel and watch field pieces jump up on recoil. Spring powered air guns have a fore and aft recoil due to the heavy piston moving forward and the recoil from the discharge of air and projectile.(which is why scopes must have optics braced both ways and be built for spring pellet guns). Any attempt to controll this dual direction recoil hurts accuracy. Try the artillery hold on your spring air rifle and I think you will be pleasantly surprised with the increased accuracy.
Bob
To correct a misconception - the artillery hold is to lay the forearm of the spring gun on your open hand or some soft object like a sand bag. Do not hold the forearm, just support it. Allow the gun to recoil naturally.This method is named for the recoil of artillery pieces. Tune to the History channel and watch field pieces jump up on recoil. Spring powered air guns have a fore and aft recoil due to the heavy piston moving forward and the recoil from the discharge of air and projectile.(which is why scopes must have optics braced both ways and be built for spring pellet guns). Any attempt to controll this dual direction recoil hurts accuracy. Try the artillery hold on your spring air rifle and I think you will be pleasantly surprised with the increased accuracy.
Bob