Author Topic: Red-haired step-child?  (Read 438 times)

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Offline VictorLouis

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Red-haired step-child?
« on: October 06, 2004, 11:04:39 AM »
The Beeman R7(Weirauch HW30S imp.) gets a TON of good press on the net, and deservedly so. Whenever anyone asks about the the "little-bro", HW30, the standard response is usually some form of

"Spend the extra $ for the R7 and get the Rekord trigger.."
 
Well, I don't really think that's altogether necessarily true.:)

I recently picked up an HW30, and I thought I'd post my observations.

How does it differ from the R7?

 The stock has no real rise on the comb, and a subtle, RH cheekpiece. Overall, it's pretty much the same as the R7, save for no checkering in the wrist. There is no butt-plate spacer, and the butt is hard plastic, vs. dense rubber. I don't notice the difference at all, and I do shoot LH.

The trigger is the stamped steel, blued, non-adj. "Perfekt" trigger. It has a slick, smooth face rather than the serrations on the Rekord, and it's hollow in the rear {like modern S&W's with MIM-triggers}. I may be wrong, but it feels as though the reach for my finger is just a tiny bit less, giving me the illusion it's more comfortable.I don't find it "that" far behind the R7's trigger OTB, however, I know the Rekord is capable of being adjusted far down from that of the factory setting. Bottom line, it's comfortable for me.

The safety is entirely different from R-7/9/1. An L-shaped sheet-metal lever, which is serrated, protrudes straight from the end of the receiver. UP to fire, DOWN to safe, with a red and white dot, respectively. It's more ambidextrous, and better looking, IMHO. It seems like it might have a break-in period all its own. At first, I though it was entirely manual, then the auto-engage feature creeped down enough to block the trigger. So far, it's not yet a positive, FULL-on click unless done by hand. A call to BPI in Kali. got me an answer from one of the techs. There's anywhere from 1/8" - 1/4" of movement from the auto-safe position, to FIRE. Thus, my gun seems to be working as-designed.

They come it at . It chronied 7.4-7.7 grains pells at:

636..44..31..33..35..43..33..34..36..36. Maybe it was the 109° temp that helped them step out that day, LOL? I don't think it had yet hit 100° when I measured the R7, but its numbers were just about exactly the same.

This one doesn't have NEAR the level of annoying twang I experienced with the R7. However, I can chalk that up just to a quirk, as I imagine the internals are likely a near duplicate with one another. I can still tell that there is SOME twang there, vs. dead quiet on some other rifles. However, it is NOT disconcerting at all. IOW, if I weren't listening and feeling for it, it might go unnoticed.

Bottom line, I certainly think that this gun deserves much better press then it gets, and I would heartily recommend it as a less expensive alternative to the R7. The savings add up to a cheap scope, or enough quality pellets to break it in thoroughly.;)
Rest in Peace, Mr. President.
Ronald Reagan 1911-2004

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Offline TC Shooter

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Red-haired step-child?
« Reply #1 on: October 07, 2004, 07:05:09 AM »
I have both as well. The HW30 is quite a bit older - don't know exactly how old. Serial no is 551111 - any ideas?

Anyway , I bought it from a friend who was not the original owner. Looks like hell but only set me back $40. The accuracy at the 50 ft indoor range is great , far better than I expected! The rifle eventually started to shoot erratically - the seals were replaced and now everything seems to be back to normal. The trigger is pretty good the way it is. There is no safety.

The R7 - I bought when the HW30 was out of comission. I like the look and feel of the stock better - it is ever so slightly wider where I grip the forearm area. It has the rubber butt plate as does my HW30. I mounted a red dot on the R7 and love the combination. I guess my R7 does have that spring "twang" mentioned above. Not really a big deal - but my HW30 does not have it.  I don't know if one is more accurate than the other. I do like the front sight better on the old HW30. I will eventually scope both for accuracy testing.

I am glad to have both - the HW30 turned out to be a real bargain even with the seal replacement. For the 50 ft indoor range they are perfect!