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词条 BSA Mercury Air Rifle
释义

  1. Specifications

  2. Operation

     Upgrades 

  3. References

  4. External links

  5. See also

{{Infobox weapon
|name= BSA Murcury
|image=
|captionBreak Barrel Air rifle from BSA
|origin= {{Flag|United Kingdom}}
|type= Air Rifle
|is_ranged= yes
|designer=
|manufacturer= BSA Guns (UK) Limited Gamo
|variants=
|weight={{convert|3|kg|lb|1|abbr=on}}
|length= 1040mm
|cartridge= .177/.22 calibre Pellets
|action= break barrel, spring powered
|velocity={{convert|600|ft/s|0|abbr=on}}
|sights=Adjustable
}}

The BSA Mercury was a break barrel spring powered Air Rifle first produced in 1972, by BSA Guns Limited, Birmingham, UK, Gamo's new subsidiary BSA Guns (UK) Limited. It was manufactured in .177 (4.5 mm) .22 (5.5 mm) & .25 (6.35mm) The latter named the "635 Magnum" The 'Mercury' model was marketed between the BSA Meteor and AirSporter and was a light, easy to use rifle with a PTFE piston and breach seal, giving a "just under legal limit UK power" of 12 ft•lbf (16.2 J) of energy. Approximately 40,000 were produced.

Specifications

  • Overall Length: Rifle 104 cm/42in
  • Barrel Length: 47 cm/18.5 in
  • Weight: 3 kg/6.6 lbs

Operation

The rifle shared the trigger, piston assembly and spring with the BSA AirSporter with the spring and piston being compressed by breaking the barrel through 125° before loading a pellet directly into the breach. The barrel was then returned into place and secured with a detent lock. The single stage trigger was metal and adjustable for pressure and travel. The sights were plastic with the front sight being able to be switched from a bead to a blade and the rear adjustable sight could switch between a "V" and "square notch". The cylinder had two shallow grooves to accept a telescopic sight.

It had a black painted finish, fitted with a beech wood stock and a rubber recoil pad. A negative point was that the barrel pivot was a low-cost pin rather than a bolt/nut assembly, and this could lead to barrel and cylinder misalignment. The Mercury, being a spring-gun suffered from recoil and was quite noisy for an air rifle. Range was limited to about 40m, with 25-30m being the maximum realistic hunting range.

The rifle was packed in a polystyrene tray with a printed cardboard sleeve. The standard kit included a bottle of oil, a small tube of Eley Wasp pellets and a pressed steel target holder with a few targets.

Upgrades

In response to increased competition from German Manufactured Air weapons’ it was re-launched in 1980 as the Mercury "S" with a checkered Walnut stock, heavier barrel, an improved trigger, an articulated cocking lever, metal open sights, and a fully blued metalwork finish.[1] The quality of the "S" version is generally considered superior to earlier guns.

Also in 1980 BSA offered a Mercury with a .25 barrel marketed as the 635 Magnum with a standard stock or the deluxe with a BSA Challenger style stock, with both stock options were beech. This rifle had standard Mercury parts, a shorter barrel, cocking aid & peep sight that could be attached to the rear sight. The gun was not popular and production ceased in 1987.

In 1985, it was upgraded again to the BSA Mercury Challenger with the addition of the maxigrip scope rail, before being superseded by the BSA Supersport in 1986.

References

1. ^BSA Chronology

External links

  • BSA Guns Home Page

See also

  • List of air guns

1 : Air guns

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