Quality BB gun?

MBanning

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Aug 13, 2013
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My nephew wants a BB gun for his birthday. He is turning 9 and I would like to get him something nice. He is a responsible young man who already has a .22LR for pest control on the farm.
It seems most BB guns are all plastic and quite cheap. I don't want CO² cartridges, PCP, or anything that is too hard for him to cock. Are there any decent options? Budget isn't unlimited but I would be happy to pay a few $100 for wood and steel over plastic.
Thank you for looking and for any help you may be able to offer,
MBanning
 
Given his age, I’d probably get him a Red Ryder. I understand that’s going in the opposite direction, but here are my reasons:
  • Inexpensive — he’ll have plenty of time for nicer BB guns when he’s a little older and can appreciate them more, and inexpensive means you could buy 2-3, and impromptu shooting competitions are fun
  • Low/no maintenance — pour BBs into it, lean it in the corner when finished shooting
  • Simple, easy to use action — he’ll be able to shoot it without constantly handing it to an adult, if his family wants that
  • Low velocity — you can somewhat see the BBs arc as they fly off, so it’s a great opportunity to learn about trajectories and holding for elevation, plus lower velocity could mean lower collateral damage to surroundings, and, he’s already got a .22
I’m all for your nephew having all the best BB guns there are, but I’d argue that right now is about setting foundations, and a Red Ryder, or 3, is great for that.
 
I was at my dads place and ran across my old red Ryder a couple of years ago. Grabbed a couple of empty soda cans out of the recycling and threw them in the yard. Popped each a couple of times, then handed it off to my smirking teen-aged son. We went back and forth for about 1/2 an hour, and he learned how much fun a simple spring operated BB gun can be.
 
I was going to say Crosman 760 - variable-velocity pump/bolt action. BBs feed from a magazine, .177 pellets single feed. Smooth bore, but pellets are as accurate as one can get without rifling. These things have been around forever - I remember the guys in my neighborhood had them. Yeah, they are plastic and cheap... but they WORK.

So I checked the Crosman web page to insure they're still sold, and see that the 2100 is offered... similar to 760 but has a rifled barrel.

I'm not sure "quality" and "BB" are achievable on the same platform.... Even when I was a kid in the early '60s, most BB guns had plastic stocks. I had a weird Crosman model that was cocked by pumping the barrel straight back into the receiver and it had a wood stock, but I can't even find it on google now (not that I looked very hard) - maybe the V350..
 
Does it have to be a BB gun, or can it be a pellet gun?

If it can be a pellet gun, I’d recommend either a Weihrauch HW30S or an HW50S in .177. The 30 is a little smaller and is easiest to cock, which translates to lower velocities though still enough for small game at short distances (~20y and in or so). The 50 is a full-size rifle that’s still easy to cock, but pushes velocities up into the 700-800fps range, making it capable of small game at more extended ranges (~40y or thereabouts). Both are a ton of fun to shoot and being break-barrel/single-shot, he won’t blow through pellets too fast and will learn to make each shot count. More importantly, both are quality air rifles that should last generations if properly cared for.
 
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Lever cocking air rifles might be what you are looking for. Tend to have better fit & finish.
 
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Daisy powerline 880 is the only answer. Better than a red ryder but its cheap enough that he can take it apart etc for science and experimenting. Its plastic... but I still have mine 30 years later.

Pumping it once is super soft, 10 pumps will take down a whitewing. Bam, instant ballistics lesson. But unlike my break barrel springers, its easier to get the 10 pumps than overcoming the spring.
 
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