Q:

New Vulcan review

First of all I want to Thank Tony at Talon Tunes for doing such a wonderful job with getting the Vulcan out to me after the long wait. Package arrived with no damage and was double boxed. Inside was the Vulcan with its plastic case with foam padding inside. Nice way to ship this kind of gun. After opening box I saw the carefully packed Vulcan laying there in sheer beauty. The stock in my opinion is gorgeous.
My very first impressions are as follows. This is a direct comparison from my .25 Cal synthetic Cricket as I have not owned any other 25 gun.
Out of the box it took little time to figure out how everything worked. Mags were easy to insert and will loosen up a bit with time. I can load a clip with one hand no problem. Not so with cricket.
Bolt actually cycles nicely to load pellet but it does take a bit of effort to push pellet all the way in. With cricket it was the opposite. Cricket was hard to pull back to load and easier to push pellet in. I did get cricket to cycle quite smoothly and I’m sure Vulcan will too once a bit of care is taken to polish the parts involved.
I did find myself reaching over to look for bolt as I was accustomed to when shooting cricket and was pleasantly surprised to have cocking lever right there where I wanted it. That is hands down the best move yet.
Tony supplied me a one hole group at 30 some yards and that had me really excited for a new gun. I had a busy day and didn’t think I would be able to shoot it too much so I did a few dry fires and would say the hammer spring made quite the twang. You could not hear the hammer spring on the cricket at all.
After supper I went and mounted SWFA FFP 3-15×42 scope with the burris inserts to get me as close to POI as possible. That took me 3 tries and had it within 3 clicks. Phew was glad that was over.
I took a fresh tin of Air Arms 25 grain pellets as I figured I will use them for my break in period and keep the kings for later. To my surprise they did very good. I emptied all four clips and refilled gun and finished setting up scope.
The Air Arms pellets easily grouped about half to ¾ inch at fifty yards shooting from my truck with a small bean bag for support. I can tell this beast is a shooter and will be tough to outdo.
Before I took gun out I ran about 8 patches through barrel to make sure its clean. Will clean it up later when I have more time. Barrel was dirty but the last patch wasn’t that bad.
I took to the road and quickly there after I took 5 birds in a row at 50-40 yards and I will tell you I was stroked. Trigger is nice and crisp the way I comes but I like it a bit lighter so I will adjust this later. Cricket trigger was not bad but defiantly not as crisp.
Gun is so small that it makes by 22 cricket look like a semitruck. It’s really really is the gun I was looking for.
As for quiet…. I would say it’s quieter than 25 cricket for sure even though its shooting a bit hotter.
The sound coming from spring makes it tough to judge. I know when I dry fired it before I had scope mounted I did point it in the direction of birds sitting on trees and fired a few shots and they didn’t budge. Cricket was much louder I would say at 930 fps.
As for accuracy it beats the cricket in a heart beat out of the box. It took me months to get cricket to shoot half as good.
I have this coke aluminum pop can beside some concrete pieces that I take practice shots with my 22 cricket. Its 90 yards away. So I take a few pokes at it with Vulcan and couldn’t tell for sure if I had hold over right so I picked a spot on concrete and fired two shots. I could not tell where they landed so I drove up to pile and went over and looked and was amazed what I saw. Two pellet markings 1” apart shot from my truck with bean bag on my knee. Simply amazing. I didn’t take picture as I didn’t have phone on me at the time and was a bugger to get there to begin with. So my first observations are very positive to say the least. This gun is a shooter no doubt.
The clips are not too bad to load but can load 2 cricket clips by the time I do one Vulcan clip.
The gun is new and stiff so it will be a while till everything gets worked in. It’s unbelievable the way it shoots. I also find that I get a small puff of air in my eye when I fire gun. I will have to check out what gives. I will move scope back a bit too as its too far forward.
Comparing the two rifles it’s night and day difference.
Cricket is too big, too heavy and too long.
I bought them from 2 different vendors and comparing to what I had to do to get cricket to shoot good is a night mare.

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Airgun Technology

All Replies

Viewing 15 replies - 31 through 45 (of 97 total)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Mike nice review, we’ll be waiting for your teardown report.

Eelect nice shooting there. Great looking groups.

quote eelect:

Busy night
50 yard 5 shot group air arms pellets

Whole magazine at 50 yards


This guy was at the wrong place and wrong time

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Air Arms are my choice of pellets as well.

Skickat från min iPhone med Tapatalk

I told you all wankers : These shoot very good. It’s nice to know that mine isn’t only an exception but they all shoot as well.

Skickat från min iPhone med Tapatalk

I did do some 72 yard groups but fouled them up. Was going good till I came off regulator. Looking like 3/4″ groups are doable. I was tired and ran out of air

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Busy night
50 yard 5 shot group air arms pellets

Whole magazine at 50 yards


This guy was at the wrong place and wrong time

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Thanks for the replies!
Even though I have had a less than perfect start to our relationship, I am really pretty enamored with this rifle.
I have had a few little quibbles, but overall, it is very impressive. The quibbles I have had can honestly be traced back to the dealer not properly adjusting everything before shipping it to me.
I really have gotten to like the magazine in every way except for the fact that it is retained by such a tiny ball bearing. I definitely would try to design a more solid system for locking the mag in place in the receiver. Maybe a locking tab, or spring loaded roller bearing, or something like that.
On the stock; It is well made, and really fits the action well. I also will admit that it is very light, and to me that is an advantage for keeping the low overall weight of the rifle.
I spent a fair amount of time tinkering with the take up adjustment on the trigger. I bought a 1 cm long set screw that threads in the hole behind the upper portion of the trigger blade. I centered this set screw in the hole (threaded all the way across the trigger frame transversely)( it is barely long enough to catch threads on both sides) (a longer set screw would be better, about 12mm) This set screw sets the trigger so that the safety will just barely slide back under the notch in the trigger completely with zero clearance. I can squeeze the trigger firmly with the safety engaged, and it does not move at all. Then I adjusted the long trigger linkage rod so that it only has about 1/16″ slack or take up. The trigger is very nice, light, crisp. I bought a couple of short set screws of the same diameter and thread, which I intend to shorten with a dremel tool a little bit , and clean up the threads, so that they will thread in from either side to lock the longer set screw in place. I could see in a perfect world how this could be made to rotate with a cam configuration, so that the trigger angle could be minutely adjusted, and a set screw from each side snugged to lock it in position. All this stuff would add to the cost of the rifle of course. The trigger linkage rod could be made to adjust with a lock nut at one end, if you can visualize it, it could thread through the trigger lever with a socket end for a long Allen wrench to finely adjust, then lock with a nut.
I plan to take some pictures of this set up, and do a short write up on disassembling the rifle to clean it and replace the parts that the dealer is sending me..

Mike

It’s breezy here today but fouled on my one and only target. Yesterday I put to mag rotation lock on and forgot about it. So I cock gun and fire and of course no pellet came out. It’s much louder when fry firing. I plan on doing some shooting tonight in a building I have access to. Was swamped all day.

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Did you do any shooting today eelect? If so how was it? I was BBQing after work a party for my kid. Man I can’t wait to zero this scope and start punching paper.

Now I would never push poor Oak around. Just standing my ground. Heck anyone here try to move an Oak lately

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

quote eelect:

They will not even last to ya. I got a Talon Tunes T shirt.

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Your a tough guy now with your 25 Vulcan TT stickers and a Black Talon Tunes shirt a REAL TOUGH GUY PUSHIN P()()R OAKS AROUND!

They will not even last to ya. I got a Talon Tunes T shirt.

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

quote eelect:

quote Caiman11:

My experience so far with my .22 vulcan is that gun is inherently accurate, but requires a bit of technique to shoot. Because of the diminutive size and rearward center of gravity, it seems that you really to squeeze it pretty tight to hold it steady. At first this was very difficult for me because I’m used to shooting a big, front heavy springer (hw97) that I generally shoot with as light a grip as possible. With a similar grip on the vulcan my groups looked like dog shit–like an inch at just 27 yards. However, when I tightened up my grip I immediately started laying down one-holers.

Are you guys having similar experiences?

I have found that a firm grip on bottom part of pistol grip on cricket works well for me. So in general I do hold it pretty firm to begin with. Heard some say something about barrel flip but I don’t notice it.

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

You don’t got get all pissy about it E I’m kinda sensitive. I might have to inform the moderators about you getting all pissy on me. :suprisedn:

Tomorrow should be a day with the Vulcan. After my sons soccer game.

quote Caiman11:

My experience so far with my .22 vulcan is that gun is inherently accurate, but requires a bit of technique to shoot. Because of the diminutive size and rearward center of gravity, it seems that you really to squeeze it pretty tight to hold it steady. At first this was very difficult for me because I’m used to shooting a big, front heavy springer (hw97) that I generally shoot with as light a grip as possible. With a similar grip on the vulcan my groups looked like dog shit–like an inch at just 27 yards. However, when I tightened up my grip I immediately started laying down one-holers.

Are you guys having similar experiences?

I have found that a firm grip on bottom part of pistol grip on cricket works well for me. So in general I do hold it pretty firm to begin with. Heard some say something about barrel flip but I don’t notice it.

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

As I said this am. I have not noticed them again. I’ll know more after tonight

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

quote eelect:

quote Zonk:

eelect are you going to lap the barrel?

Zonk I’m going to shoot it indoors tonight and will see. If it’s tight at 70 I’ll watch and see if I have to. By the looks of it just leave it be. Never seen a new gun shoot like this

Sent from my Z30 using Tapatalk

Zonk is playing grab ass with Lead. Don’t bother them leads pissed Zonk commented on his skishy ass.

Any more puffs of air eelect?

Viewing 15 replies - 31 through 45 (of 97 total)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.