The prongs engage into the rear of the action and a screw at the top of the butt pad pulls it all together. The rear section is little more than a piece of walnut on a metal rod with three prongs on one end and an adjustable butt pad on the other. 177 was launched that more attention was paid to the TDR and rightly so, as this is in my opinion is the one to beat! 22 calibre but a low shot count had many passing for the full stock carbine version. In my opinion the TDR takes the gold prize for that alone. It’s not only the metalwork that makes this a winner because the take-down by its very essence relies heavily for balance and handling on how the components fit together to make a complete rifle. The Air Arms TDR is a well thought out design but then again it uses the company’s S410’s tried and trusted action. All are available in the ‘other’ popular calibre and of course you need a scope and in some cases a silencer but these are my views and the ones I highly recommend you consider.Ī, The Air Arms TDR shown on the deluxe carry bag – in my opinion the take-down of all take-downs…ī, No surprises it runs the time tested S410 multi-shot action Incidentally, I’m detailing the calibres I favour for each so the shot capacity holds true for that alone. Due to the positive feedback received to my last article voicing my views on take-down PCP air rifles and the increased interest in them from the buying public the Editor has asked me to give mini reviews and stats of the four I rate most highly.
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