Jager
Gold $$ Contributor
So I posted my inquiry here a week ago. Spent a bunch of hours last weekend contemplating all y'all's advice... and late on Monday I placed an order. The UPS truck showed up yesterday.
This morning I borrowed a QD Atlas bipod from one of my battle rifles, mounted the scope I ordered along with the airgun, and wore my sorry ass out with the hand pump I bought getting 250 BAR of air into the thing. Yeah, that pump thing definitely ain't gonna work long term, less'n someone was wanting to replace their gym membership.

It's an FX Impact M3 Sniper, in .22 cal. The "sniper" means that it comes with a 700mm barrel instead of the 600mm standard; and a slightly larger air bottle.
I've been shooting for a very long time. But when looking at scopes on several airgun sites, they all had these brands I had never heard of. I wasn't quite sure what to make of that. Originally thought I'd spend $5-600 on something. Eventually went a bit higher, and for a brand - Element - that, again, I'd never heard of. But between needing closer-distance parallax adjustment and a robust enough build that an "airgun" spec can be attached - airgun-specific scopes are apparently a thing, at least for springers.
I'll say that the glass on this model is very, very nice. And after running through my normal scope-mounting drill it only took a half-dozen shots to get it zero'd at 50 yards.
Ran one magazine, which amounted to 28 rounds of 25.39 gr. pellets and maybe 35 BAR of that precious air that I worked so hard to get into it.
I didn't find the trigger to be nearly as good as most reviews suggested. It's okay. It does have a fair bit of adjustment, so I'm looking forward to playing with that. But a Jewell it's not.
The two big things that attracted me to the FX were its solid reputation for accuracy and its ability to modify the pressure curve behind the projectile with its rather sophisticated regulator adjustments - something we do all the time in the centerfire world via the loading bench.
I'm fortunate to be able to shoot any kind of firearm I want just outside my door. It's hard to overstate what a blessing that is.
But even that requires a fair bit of effort. Walking out target stands, setting flags, setting up my bench, carrying out my stool, setting up and aligning my front rest and rear bags, bringing out the tripod for the chronograph, pulling out hearing protection and eye protection... there are a lot of back and forth trips to collect things and get them set up. And then when you're done, you have to break everything down and put it away. And then clean whichever guns you shot.
My thought with the whole airgun thing was to have a "lighter footprint" option to go to when I don't want to go full monty with my powder burners. Based on what I saw out of those first couple dozen shots today, I think this airgun will do that very, very well.
Once again, I really appreciate all y'all's help in getting there.View attachment 1427127

This morning I borrowed a QD Atlas bipod from one of my battle rifles, mounted the scope I ordered along with the airgun, and wore my sorry ass out with the hand pump I bought getting 250 BAR of air into the thing. Yeah, that pump thing definitely ain't gonna work long term, less'n someone was wanting to replace their gym membership.

It's an FX Impact M3 Sniper, in .22 cal. The "sniper" means that it comes with a 700mm barrel instead of the 600mm standard; and a slightly larger air bottle.
I've been shooting for a very long time. But when looking at scopes on several airgun sites, they all had these brands I had never heard of. I wasn't quite sure what to make of that. Originally thought I'd spend $5-600 on something. Eventually went a bit higher, and for a brand - Element - that, again, I'd never heard of. But between needing closer-distance parallax adjustment and a robust enough build that an "airgun" spec can be attached - airgun-specific scopes are apparently a thing, at least for springers.
I'll say that the glass on this model is very, very nice. And after running through my normal scope-mounting drill it only took a half-dozen shots to get it zero'd at 50 yards.
Ran one magazine, which amounted to 28 rounds of 25.39 gr. pellets and maybe 35 BAR of that precious air that I worked so hard to get into it.
I didn't find the trigger to be nearly as good as most reviews suggested. It's okay. It does have a fair bit of adjustment, so I'm looking forward to playing with that. But a Jewell it's not.
The two big things that attracted me to the FX were its solid reputation for accuracy and its ability to modify the pressure curve behind the projectile with its rather sophisticated regulator adjustments - something we do all the time in the centerfire world via the loading bench.
I'm fortunate to be able to shoot any kind of firearm I want just outside my door. It's hard to overstate what a blessing that is.
But even that requires a fair bit of effort. Walking out target stands, setting flags, setting up my bench, carrying out my stool, setting up and aligning my front rest and rear bags, bringing out the tripod for the chronograph, pulling out hearing protection and eye protection... there are a lot of back and forth trips to collect things and get them set up. And then when you're done, you have to break everything down and put it away. And then clean whichever guns you shot.
My thought with the whole airgun thing was to have a "lighter footprint" option to go to when I don't want to go full monty with my powder burners. Based on what I saw out of those first couple dozen shots today, I think this airgun will do that very, very well.
Once again, I really appreciate all y'all's help in getting there.View attachment 1427127
