Date: 19/3/2024 4:39

PY-4333-8353

Remington AirMaster 77 Air Rifle Kit

Main Product Rating 4.04.0 (2 reviews)
Remington AirMaster 77 Air Rifle Kit

Remington AirMaster 77, Image 1Remington AirMaster 77, Image 2Remington AirMaster 77, Image 3Remington AirMaster 77, Image 4
PY-4333-8353

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  • FeatureIcon
    WARNING WARNING This product can expose you to chemicals including lead, which is known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov

See other products by Crosman > Remington

This multi-pump pneumatic rifle shoots either BBs or pellets. The Remington AirMaster 77 is dressed in a black matte synthetic stock and forearm and nickel barrel. The grip and forearm have checkering for a sure grasp. The fiber optic front sight and the completely adjustable rear sight make it easy to acquire your target. Zero in on targets with greater accuracy with the included 4x15 scope. Speaking of targets, you'll have plenty of them!

This rifle flings lead pellets at a whopping 750 fps (800 with BBs), because it sports a new valve design. This new valve gives you higher velocity and the ability to pump more air into your AirMaster 77. You can vary the power of the rifle, depending on the distance of your target. Twelve pumps is the maximum you can put into the AirMaster 77, but that's plenty! Pellets are loaded one at a time. BBs are loaded into a reservoir that holds 200 BBs. Through gravity, you move the BBs into the magazine, which holds 17. (Never shoot steel BBs at metal objects!)




  • AirMaster 77 Air Rifle Kit
  • 4x15 mm scope
  • Repeater
  • Multi-pump pneumatic
  • 11mm Dovetail
  • 3-12 pumps (Never pump more than 12 times!)

See other products by Crosman > Remington

Remington AirMaster 77 Kit Specs

Max Velocity800 fps
Overall Length39.75"
ButtplatePlastic
FunctionRepeater
Weight3.25 lbs
Trigger Pull5.25 lbs
Scopeable11mm dovetail
SafetyManual
Suggested forPlinking/Fun
Caliber.177 (4.5mm)
Loudness3-Medium
Barrel Length20.88"
Shot Capacity200
Cocking Effort3-12 pumps
BarrelRifled
Front SightFiber Optic
Rear SightAdjustable for windage & elevation
TriggerTwo-stage non-adjustable
ActionBolt-action
PowerplantMulti-pump pneumatic
Body TypeRifle
Fixed/adj. powerFixed

Remington AirMaster 77 Kit Reviews

Rating 4.04.0 (2 reviews)
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Rating 4.04.0 4.0

Rating 4.04.0 4.0

Rating 4.04.0 4.0

Things I liked:

Powerful

Things I would have changed:

Trigger pole is very hard. Unable to get a clear sharp image through Scope.

Rating 4.04.0 4.0

Rating 4.04.0 4.0

Rating 5.05.0 5.0

Verified Purchase

Things I liked:

The metal compression piston; zero wiggle or side play in the pumping action/arm; solid feeling heft; solid feeling forend (even though it's plastic); metal trigger (nice touch); accuracy out of the box was spot on to hit spinning targets at about 20 yrds; pumping isn't too hard but is more than my older worn in Daisy 990; barrel shroud is beautiful; the iron sights are perfectly sized/shaped to produce a solid sight picture. I've owned 7 air rifles (2 single pump, 2 multi-pump, 1 multi-pump/CO2 dual power (Daisy), 1 springer, 1 gas ram, and 1 multi-pump that was so awful that I had to return it to the store), and I have begun to become a bit of an enthusiast. I have several future purchases planned, but this airgun is far and away the most solid feeling of the pneumatics that I've owned. Lastly, the spinning targets are fun!

Things I would have changed:

I want an all metal receiver with the same power plant. It seems that perhaps an earlier version of this rifle did have a metal receiver. There's a YouTube video of a guy who stripped the paint and polished the receiver in 2010. Perhaps Crosman changed to a plastic receiver to keep cost down when they upgraded the power plant? I personally would prefer to have a version that was as the other reviewer put it, "the holy grail" of air rifles by having both the metal power plant and the metal receiver. Perhaps a special edition? Wood would be nice, but I understand that seems reserved for higher priced designs. Second is the cocking handle for the bolt. It is stiff/hard to cock as stated by others, but not that bad, unless your hands start to sweat and your grip slips. I think perhaps a longer handle length, shape change, or other ergonomics answer would address it. Butt stock is loudly hollow, compared against all my other plastic airguns of similar to lower price point.

What others should know:

After extensive research, across numerous websites, of nearly every YouTube video I could find, all to answer the question "what is the difference between the CR2100B, CR1000, and AM77" I finally settled on this gun due to a few references that stated this was a metal receiver and that it had a metal compression piston with the higher performance of the CR1000. I effectively expected the guts of the CR1000, the metal receiver of the 2100, with the nice look of the brushed look metal barrel shroud. This was to be my (nearly) perfect lower cost pneumatic air rifle. What I have learned is that the AM77 is effectively the CR1000 with a metal barrel shroud. It DOES NOT have a metal receiver. Also note that on the Crosman site, the CR1000 warns to only use RMCOIL (silicone) for lubrication due to higher compression. I have asked Crosman if that also applies to the AM77, but in that both guns are producing the same FPS and that their internals are the same it makes sense this needs RMCOIL.

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  • Francisco from USA asked:

    Has anyone confirmed the claimed 800 fps, or the 10 fpe? I'm getting 7.3 fpe with the 5.14 grain BB at 800 fps, and 10 fpe with an 8 grain lead pellet at 750 fps. Is this BB gun dieseling with the lead pellet? I have a Legacy 1000 and the most I have gotten with a BB is 754 fps and that's after well broken in, polished and oiled. If this Remington does put out 800 fps, I'm getting 2.

    • Mark from USA answered:

      The velocity of airguns will vary gun to gun. The manufacturers' specs are often a bit high. Dieseling would involve a loud firing bang and smoke from the barrel after each shot. That would typically go away after 50 shots or so. a difference of 50 FPS from spec is actually quite good. We consider any velocity within 10% to be spot on.

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