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Education / Training Tuning a cheap Chinese airgun – Part 2

Tuning a cheap Chinese airgun – Part 2

by Tom Gaylord

Part 1

Yesterday, we saw what kind of performance to expect from an inexpensive Chinese airgun. The velocity was just over half the advertised speed, and accuracy was out the window. Let’s see what can be done to correct these problems. You’ll have to decide whether or not it’s worth the effort.

One of my most vocal readers was a man by the name of Ray Apelles. He and his father, Hans, had modified several Chinese spring rifles with varying degrees of luck, but he strongly recommended that I test and tune one for The Airgun Letter. He said he would even provide the tuneup guidelines. As it turned out, Ray actually wrote most of the report.

What’s inside?
Upon disassembling the gun, I was pleased to find that the piston seal was leather. Leather is much more adaptable and forgiving for the home tuner, as long as you aren’t going for magnum power. The TS45 could never achieve that power level with its narrow piston bore and short stroke, so a leather seal was most welcome.

I also found all the metal parts to be durable and properly hard. They did suffer from too many burrs and rough edges, but several hours of careful stoning took care of that. Ray had me sleeve the transfer port to reduce its diameter. That improved the airflow pattern and kept the piston from slamming into the end of the compression chamber

ts-45-transfer-web
A brass tube has been swaged into the walls of the air transfer port. It reduces the inside diameter from 0.141″ to 0.125″.

New piston seal
Ray had me make a new leather seal for the rifle. Since I had written an article about how to make leather piston seals of any size, I just followed my own instructions and made a tight one. I lubricated the compression chamber with moly grease (Beeman M-2-M), soaked the leather piston seal in petroleum oil and put the gun together. Velocity with H&N Finale Match pellets went from 460f.p.s. to 580 f.p.s. from doing just these minimal things, plus removing all the burrs in the action. Accuracy remained poor, of course.

New mainspring
Next, I installed a Maccari mainspring and lubricated it with Beeman Mainspring Dampening Compound. Today, I’d use Maccari’s Velocity Tar (it wasn’t available in 1996). Velocity increased with the same H&N pellet to 666 f.p.s. The firing behavior was now very calm and free from vibration.

X-ray vision
Ray works in the radiology department of a hospital, so he took some X-rays of the trigger parts both cocked and uncocked. They show a different picture than most shooters conceive their trigger looks like, so I included them here.

ts45-X2-web
This is what the trigger looks like when the gun is not cocked.

ts45-X1-web
Here’s the trigger when cocked.

I did lube the trigger parts with moly. That resulted in a crisp, positive 26-oz. pull. No stoning was done because Ray warned not to do it. As you can see in the X-rays, the trigger doesn’t function like you might think.

New barrel
Finally, I shipped the action to Dennis Quackenbush, who installed a Lothar Walther barrel for me. He was kind enough to polish and blue the barrel and action before returning it, so it looked more like a European gun afterwards (except for the stock). Accuracy went from 2″ at 10 meters down to under 1/4″. And, this barrel was cut off, so it wasn’t even choked. Who knows how much better it might have been?

What did I gain from all this work? I took a $30-40 Chinese sidelever, spent about $150 plus 12-15 hours of time and got the performance of a CZ 630 that I could buy for $80 at that time. Was it worth it? No – if the goal was to get a good rifle cheap. Yes, if the goal was to play around inside a rifle I wouldn’t be afraid to damage. After it was all over, I still had the same opinion of cheap Chinese air rifles, but now I had added some hands-on experience.

author avatar
Tom Gaylord (B.B. Pelletier)
Tom Gaylord, also known as B.B. Pelletier, provides expert insights to airgunners all over the world on behalf of Pyramyd AIR. He has earned the title The Godfather of Airguns™ for his contributions to the industry, spending many years with AirForce Airguns and starting magazines dedicated to the sport such as Airgun Illustrated.

16 thoughts on “Tuning a cheap Chinese airgun – Part 2”

  1. You spent $150 and 2 days labor to get $80 worth of performance???

    That’s the story of my life!

    It seems that Chinese barrels (especially Shanghai) are very much hit-ot-miss… get a good one, and you can make it into a nice shooter with a little massaging. Git a bad one, and ferget it!

    I seem to have gotted a bad one on my recently purchased AR1000 (TF89/SS1000). I’m gonna try fixing it by boring it out and fitting a 1077 barrel as a liner.

  2. i had a few questions on the 392 peep sight.
    1. does it mount on the barrel or reciever
    2. do i need to take off the back sight to use it
    3. is it even possible to take off the rear sight
    4.how much will it improve my accuracy
    thanks

  3. Hi Tom,

    I read some of your recent reviews of the Contender series and they were all favourable. Could it be possible that you were given some select samples or it’s the result of a “great leap forward” of a manufacturer? I am tempted to give them a try but still a little worried that it’s still a luck of the draw. Thanks.

  4. Leather seals,

    I will ask B.B. for another time slot for thi article.

    DKY,

    It is possible I got set-up guns, except half of them were drop-shipped from a different source. It’s hard to stop the cherry-picking that goes on, but I BELIEVE THESE WERE GENUINE OUT-OF-THE-BOX GUNS.

    However, anything Chinese is still a lottery.

    Tom

  5. Tom,

    Rather than taking volume out of the transfer port, how about removing the cone shaped seal from the sliding compression chamber, cutting the seal’s cone shaped seat deeper while preserving the angle, and installing the new barrel DEEPER so that the skirt of the pellet pokes into the compression chamber? Cut out the parallel part of the transfer port and set the barrel back into it.

  6. OK, this is the guy who posted the last comment. I did not realize I was looking at the muzzle end of the compression chamber in the picture. I guess it’s not a flat seal seated in a cone cut into the metal but a cylindrical cutout, with a seal which is a cylinder on the outside and a cone on the inside. However, I still feel you could make a cone shaped cut TO THE SEAL so as to allow the barrel to be set back. The lower sealing area would probabaly be more than made up for with higher sealing pressure.

  7. Did the leather piston seal article ever surface?
    I am about to repair a couple of old springers, (one chinese, and one spanish) – I know one needs a new piston seal.. I’d liek to know what I’m doing since parts are impossible to buy locally.

    Thanks,
    Dyb

    • Here’s an option 2, use a rubber breach seal instead of leather. I got an increase of 40-50 fps.

      For the Chinese B3-2, the underlever .177, use a 1/4 beveled washer, with a 9/16″ OD, found in the plumbing section of Home Depot, 10 washers for under $2.00.

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