Ok i did my 1077. Not only the co2 paint ball tanks, but i went to HPA tanks and ended up doing it in 90g co2 cartridge Yes got to get a 90g cartridge adaptors so it screw, into the 90g cartridge. i put a elbow on it where i can use the cartridge as a forehand stock. This off and on valve has a gauge on it to. let me know how much i have left. When i get finish shooting it. i just turn the cartridge off. That what i ending up doing. I like it the best of all
You mention getting 40 shots out of the 1077 and Crosman states 50 shots. I just purchased mine and here are my results. Any positive input would be appreciated, as with mine, I'm a little disappointed. 1) Using Crosman co2 cartridges 2) Tested with various pellets (Hobby, RWS R10, Excite, Destroyer, Diablo) 3) Temperature was 75 degrees 4) Distance was 20 yards. (I know most shoot at 10 yards, but I like the challenge) So here's my disappointment and I'd like to hear from others. First, I'd like to mention, at 20 yards with an inexpensive scope, 12 shots landed within 3/4" grouping. I'm happy with that, but on the next clip, with the first 6 shots, you can feel and see the decline in co2, as the shots were dropping on the target and the next 6 shots in the second clip seemed to have trouble getting a few pellets out. With that said, I was only able to shoot 24 shots max per co2, half of which showed diminishing power. I guess if I was at 10 yards instead of 20 yards I wouldn't have noticed the drop, but again, I like the challenge. What is everyone else getting (shots per co2)? Note: I do want to mention that I did not hear any co2 leaks. And are there any recommendations? The cost of switching out the co2 after every 24 shots along with the cost of pellets, for another 2 cents per shot, I could be shooting a real firearm, as .22lr ammo isn't much more. Looking forward in hearing from others.
I'am trying to beef my up then juice it up later, I found a Bushnell 45 mm wide scope for it in my foot locker, and a muzzle brake off a 10/22 rim fire. The scope is a over kill for the gun! I used it on my mini 14 for 500 yrds. but it looks so sweet. Gave it a high power rifle look . Think after i get it boosted i'll paint it neon camo It looks good all black> BUT I WANT NEON COLORS
@@thebudgetshooter5832 The paint is scary 😆 👍 Yes your correct ! but we must move forward in to places where no man been b4 in modifications! We have the tools to do it, just getting the guts to do it! is the question? lmao me and paint don't work well for each other its the paint that messes me up, Hey i just subscribed i got a few videos. I need a camera girl to keep up with me.
Brandt Smith it has worked perfectly with absolutely no leaks whatsoever. I have though followed the manufacturer recommendations exactly and left it installed since I first put it in. I also put a drop of pellet gun oil on the connector orings so it gets "through" the system of seals as you use it.
thomas bourgeois I dont have a chronograph but baised on the manufacturers testing you might get a small increase in velocity (10fps-50fps depending on the pellet.) The primary advantage is that all your shots will be full power with less variation in velocity.
Brian Knickerbocker You can attach a HPA tank but it will obviously need to be fitted with a regulator to bring it down to the correct psi for the co2 gun.
could you inform me ondi I buy these adapter or what parts should I buy to make one of these because I live in Brazil and here the c02 are very expensive and I wanted to adapt to PCP HAS HOW?
Thanks for the info, I did the conversion but am wondering about getting the tank filled, should I ask for only 800psi or what pressure are you filling? Also can you just run air in the tank with a hand pump or does it have to be co2? Thanks again.
QQTrick1QQ Co2 is what you will want to use. Co2 is basically just one pressure as a gas (~850psi) but is stored as a liquid in the container. If the pressure reaches 1000psi there is a burst disc that fails in the container that releases the over pressurized gas. Hand pumping or compressing air continually adds pressure to a volume and can go to thousands of psi (depending on container) which when released will be at the higher psi but will not be a liquid in the container. This is why co2 has a cooling effect changing from liquid to gas.
valentin melazzi I actually don't have a parts list. I was able to purchase the entire unit assembled from the owners link in the description. It's possible you could contact him and ask which parts he used.
There really is no good way to mod these rifles for bulk CO2. This setup here is great if you stand in the same spot for the rest of your life. Who the hell wants to carry all that crap around with them when you want to shoot. Crosman had the right idea with the AirSource conversion kit but I guess they figured that design too was a piss poor idea because they leaked a lot and added a very noticeable amount of weight to the gun and made them very front heavy so they stopped selling those. I guess for now the best thing is buy bulk 12 gram cartridges, stuff a few in your pocket and go shoot I mean what does it take 10 seconds to change one??? If anyone will design the right kit for the Crosman 1077 in the future, it will be Crosman. I will wait for them to do it I guess. All the ideas I have seen here on Y-T are hack jobs for the most part. If you want to carry around all those giant neanderthal tanks you might as well just hook your 1077 up to the oxygen tanks we will all be carting around with us soon...one snort for me...one for the gun...one snort for me...one for the gun. Get it??
wally walton I totaly agree. For maneuverability and true hunting I would probably just recommend you skip over the 1077 or the Wildfire and go a different route. These guns are really just for fun with the 12 shots its way up on the cool list and can be handy for pest control in small areas. Trudging around the woods would be a nightmare with a remote line. Its just fun is all and I'm glad someone is making these still besides Crosman.
wally walton yeah and that's got to be damn heavy too. Backpack and shit. Maybe best to have made a co2 kinda longer than normal size. But a propane tank size lol.
I get 60 to as high as 70 shots out of a 12 gram, I spend more time reloading those ring clips with pellets during target shoots, That's what needs a modification....not c02
Chris Coca yes you can in theory. The HPA tank would need a regulator to keep the psi from going higher than co2 psi and being dangerous. At that point the FPS wpuld be the same; you would just get even more stable shots per tank.