Review by Airgun Shooter Magazine
Transcription
Review by Airgun Shooter Magazine
Licensed to THRILL .303 is a classic English calibre – but who would have expected to see it on a UK-made air rifle? Clearly Daystate – that’s what their new 100ft/lb Wolverine PCP comes in… and JSB have even manufactured a diabolo pellet especially for it! Nigel Allen gets an exclusive few weeks with the air rifle the whole world is talking about… B ack in 2006, Daystate afforded me access to a top-secret gun they were working on, called Project Wolverine. I wasn’t allowed to breathe a word of it to anyone. However, what initially started out as an electronic-based rifle has ultimately ended up as a fully mechanical job – and even though the full production model is totally different from the prototype I saw all those years ago, what the Staffordshire-based gunmaker is finally delivering to the market is a truly awesome bit of kit. Of course, Daystate’s new Wolverine 303 has been exhibited at a few trade and public shooting shows during 2012, so many more shooters are now party to its existence – but no-one outside of Daystate has yet had the privilege of spending any decent range time with it… except me, that is. I’ve now put a few hundred rounds through the gun which, I don’t mind admitting, made me feel a little ‘guilty’ when I attended Daystate’s official unveiling of the Wolverine to the world’s media and selected invitees at the salubrious Greystoke Castle in Cumbria in mid-July! As has been the case with many of Daystate’s new models down the decades, the Wolverine laughs in the face of ‘normal’. Their attractive new model may appear to be a traditional air rifle on the outside, but there are a few features that stand out, the most obvious one being its power. At a tickle over 100ft/lb, the Wolverine 303 has a muzzle energy more than eight times your conventional sub-12ft/lb, licence- 14 AIRGUN SHOOTER ON AIR v gun.t www.air Below: Former world FT champion, Stuart Hancox, demonstrating the Wolverine’s accuracy at 100 yards TEST: WOLVERINE 303 Left: The Daystate Wolverine – unveiled in July at Greystoke Castle in Cumbria Above: Development prototypes of the .303 free air rifle – so non-ticket holders need not apply! Indeed, while Daystate expect an interest from shooters in the UK, the Wolverine is seen more as an ‘export’ model. Unsurprisingly, the USA is its core target market. Interestingly, where most FAC air rifle users shoot around the 30 or 40ft/lb mark, the Wolverine is still two-to-three times more powerful – which potentially extends its range as a hunting tool from the 60 or so yards most FAC airgunners claim as their effective range, to 100-plus yards. I could group the Emperors within a 40mm circle at that distance – although such ranges obviously bring the shooter’s own ability into play moreso than when shooting over ‘normal’ airgun distances; being a good shot at 100 yards is significantly more difficult than putting pellets on their mark at, say, 40 yards. But it’s not impossible. Daystate invited former World FT champion, Stuart Hancox, to demonstrate the Wolverine at Greystoke Castle, and his ability to flatten a standard, 40mm-kill knockdown over 100 yards – even from a standing position! – demonstrated to everyone just how devastatingly accurate this rifle is. Airgun ‘tradition’ has also been discarded in the Wolverine’s calibre – and its model suffix of 303 gives an early clue. Forget .177, .22, .20 or even .25 – Daystate’s new rifle is delivered in the good old British bore of .303 calibre! Actually, the barrel itself is slightly sub-size, at .30 calibre – and there’s a quite a story to tell, too. Project Wolverine originally began with a .30 calibre, brass-lined barrel of Steve Harper’s, the engineering talent behind so many of Daystate’s PCP models. Steve hand-swaged .30 calibre pellets (from a.25 pellet) and this enabled Daystate to gather enough ballistic data to approach Lothar Walther for the production of an air rifle barrel in .30 calibre. While Walther had plenty of .30 calibre bores available, Daystate’s brief required a whole new rethink. Daystate wanted their new rifle to perform with conventional, waisted pellets – production versions of which, of course, didn’t exist at the time! – rather than bullet-shaped ammo, as had been the case when they’d developed their .25 calibre, 80ft/lb Air Ranger Extreme model a few years earlier. There’s a reason why Daystate chose waisted pellets over bulletshaped slugs. They strongly felt that their high-power air rifle had to be different from a rimfire – after all, if you have two rifles delivering in the region of 100ft/lb, why would you choose the air-powered one? However, the gathered data had confirmed that the in-flight performance of a waisted air rifle pellet producing 100ft/lb at the muzzle dropped off massively after around 150 yards; this, felt Daystate, would be an important consideration to FAC shooters who didn’t want the super-long ‘fall-out’ distances associated with rimfires. The R&D that went in to the barrel was immense. Unlike the existing ‘four’ airgun calibres, Walther’s technicians had minimal data to draw on with regards to twist rates, rifling depth and land/groove ratios. But after some considerable time, Walther came up with a choked bore that was suitable for use with air rifle pellets – and it’s the only choked AIRGUN SHOOTER 15 Above: Nigel gets to grips with the Wolverine’s hefty, but wellbalanced, dimensions Right: The chrono readings revealed its high power output across 10 shots THE EMPEROR RULES barrel in this calibre out there; live-round guns don’t require a muzzle constriction. Daystate then sent the new barrel to the Czech airgun ammo manufacturer JSB. The brief was to design a conventional, diabolo airgun pellet around it. To cut a long story short – which even included them having to source a special supply of lead in order to achieve the 50-grain mark – JSB finally came up with a round heavy enough to withstand the air blast at the breech and remain stable enough in flight for 100-plus yards. That pellet is now in full production – called the Rangemaster Emperor – and is sized at .303 calibre. On the scales, the Emperor weighs-in at 50.15 grains – more than three times that of a conventional .22 pellet, and more than double the weight of the heavyweight ‘magnums’ that FAC shooters favour. By comparison with ‘conventional’ airgun calibres, it’s nothing short of a monster pellet… with, of course, monster stopping power! With the barrel and pellet sorted, the rest of the rifle – now some way down the design road – could be refined. Everything looks ‘oversize’ on the Wolverine – and it has to be, to cope with the greater stresses that the mechanical components have to withstand. Even the characteristic-looking breech of the Wolverine is machined from a solid action chassis – yet despite its dimensions, the Wolverine is anything but a handful to have up against your shoulder. It actually weighs the best part of five kilos with a scope on board, but it doesn’t feel anywhere near that weight when you’re on aim – the balance is very neutral between the hold-points. BRAND: Daystate Rangemaster Emperor MANUFACTURER: JSB, Czech Republic CALIBRE: .303 (7.62mm) TYPE: Waisted roundhead diabolo WEIGHT: 50.15grains (3.25grams) QUANTITY: 150 per tin SRP: £10.95 per tin The breech bolt and safety are fine examples of Daystate's topclass engineering 16 AIRGUN SHOOTER The stylish walnut sporter stock features an ambidextrous cheekpiece and heightadjustable butt The Wolverine’s trigger is surprisingly light and crisp considering the power of the rifle Its Gary Cane-designed sporter stock – the only guise Daystate are offering – is fabricated out of walnut by Minelli, with an ambidextrous, raised cheekpiece and a long, gently rounded forend that sports beautiful curves and a scalloped recess at its deepest point, below the breech. Artistic panels of stippling aid your hold at the pistol grip, although those applied to the side of the forestock are more for aesthetic purposes than practical reasons, as you won’t want your leading hand this far back. The butt pad is, however, height adjustable to assist gunfit, and there’s an integral manometer inlet into the belly of the forend, between the one stock-bolt and the laser-etching of Daystate’s famous logo. The metalwork ranks among the bestfinished I’ve seen from Daystate. The main cylinder – a 40mm diameter, 300cc affair which you fill to 250BAR (and refill at 200BAR) – and barrel shroud above it are finished in anti-reflective, matt black. It contrasts beautifully with the titanium/magnesium breech block, and high gloss of the stainless steel bolt. A manual safety catch at the rear of the action slides on to the left, and off with a ‘click’ of precision, the like of which I’ve never before felt on an air rifle. It’s resettable, although for various reasons pertaining to export territories, Daystate have designed the Wolverine’s bolt such that, once open, the trigger is rendered totally inoperative. And how much effort is required to cock a 100 foot-pounder? Incredibly, not a lot in the Wolverine’s case – you don’t actually tug the bolt a lot more than you do that of a 12ft/lb Huntsman. And there’s no heavy trigger to get past to release the shot, either – it may have a muzzle energy in excess of 99.99 per cent of airguns on the planet, but the Wolverine’s trigger breaks every bit as sweetly as that of a sub-12ft/lb PCP. Fully adjustable and with a let-off down to around 3lb, its curved, stainless blade is a nice complement to the grip and falls to finger perfectly, where it breaks crisply and consistently every time. While filling is completed via Daystate’s usual snap-fit system, you’re going to find yourself doing it a lot more often – but you have to expect heavy air usage on such a high-powered gun. According to my Skan chrono, my test rifle was spitting out Emperors at 100ft/lb, and it returned 10 usable shots per charge. Unlike a sub-12ft/lb PCP, where the sweet spot of the power curve is usually Daystate’s snap-fit system is once again in evidence, but will require much more frequent use! AIRGUN SHOOTER 17 The Wolverine’s shroud goes some way to mitigating its report, and has the option for fitting a silencer within 0.7ft/lb deviation, ‘usable’ at this power level spans around 3ft/lb total deviation. Daystate tell me that they’re currently working on a couple of tweaks to the hammer and valve, and expecting finalised production models to give in the region of 12 shots up to 110ft/lb. Either way, it’s no plinking rifle – but, to be fair, you’d only ever be considering the Wolverine 303 as a serious pest control tool, anyway. Being a PCP, it is recoilless – but by comparison with a sub-12 pneumatic, it’s not quite as ‘dead’ in your shoulder. That’s because it has to start a 50-grain pellet off on its journey down the barrel, and you definitely feel some movement as a result. You also feel the ‘rocket’ effect as the high pressure air escapes out of the muzzle, behind the pellet – and though some air is deflected back down the 24mm diameter shroud to help dissipate this ‘dirty’ air, the Emperors break out with more muzzle report than you’d get on a standard airgun. It’s quite a crack, though Daystate are in the process of designing a Wolverine-specific silencer to screw on to the 1/2in UNF-threaded muzzle shroud. Surprisingly, that rocket effect doesn’t have too much bearing on accuracy – and Stuart Hancox actually printed a few sub-25mm groups on Daystate’s 98-yard factory range! Because the Emperors are travelling at 950 feet per second, they leave the 584mm-long barrel after just two milliseconds, making the Wolverine a very forgiving rifle to shoot. While I couldn’t match Stuart’s performance, I was able to regularly print 30mm groups at 75 yards. And even in a gale, the windage shift is a pleasure to contend with! The five-shot magazine supplied with my test rifle wasn’t a fullproduction unit, so it will look a little different when it comes to market – but based around the low-profile magazine system on the rest of Daystate’s range, it won’t interfere with your scope, especially as the breech block is a little higher than on other models. The indexing system which drives the magazine unit is simply ingenious – and patented because of it. It works rather like a firearm, The bolt is nice and easy to pull back, offering little more resistance than on a sub-12 rifle 18 AIRGUN SHOOTER Daystate’s five-shot magazine can be loaded from either the left or right The patented airactivated indexing system – this pin engages with the magazine pawl TEST: WOLVERINE 303 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS - AIR RANGER ACTION TYPE: Mechanical ‘slingshot’ COCKING: Bolt-action, auto-loading 10-shot magazine CALIBRE: .303 (7.62mm) FILL PRESSURE: 250BAR, via snap-fit SHOTS PER CHARGE: Usable: 10 (minimum) to 15 (maximum) OVERALL LENGTH: 1,092 mm BARREL LENGTH: 584mm WEIGHT: 4.5kg (unscoped) STOCK: Walnut, sporter, ambidextrous TRIGGER: Two-stage, adjustable SAFETY: Manual, slider, resettable POWER: 100+ft/lb with Rangemaster Emperor (50.15 grains) PRICE: £1,400 CONTACT: Daystate 01782 791755 www.daystate.com in that it’s the shockwave of air, thrust backwards by the main valve operation, which pushes up a small pin from the base of the breech tray. In turn, this releases the spring-operated pawl within the magazine. When the bolt is next drawn back, the magazine’s inner cassette is free to rotate under spring tension, automatically aligning the next pellet chamber with the breech – and the probe then transfers the pellet into the rifling upon closure of the bolt. Just as cleverly, the indexing system stops working when the main air tank falls below a certain pressure to ensure you can’t get a 50-grain pellet stuck up the barrel. On the subject of the bolt, the great news for southpaws is that it’s easily swapped from right to left-handed operation in around two minutes, using just a screwdriver and 5mm hex key. It’s something I’m sure all lefthanders will applaud Daystate for. So, having read all this, you may be wondering why you’d choose a 100ft/lb air rifle over a 100ft/lb rimfire – and at £1,400 for the rifle, going down the live-round route would certainly be cheaper. But I think Daystate’s original line of thinking for developing a waisted pellet for the Wolverine, rather than a solid bullet, is the correct one. The Wolverine comes with all the benefits of a rimfire out to 150 yards, with added benefits of it being quieter and less restrictive when it comes to considering the area beyond your target. I can think of many areas on my own permission where I could never take an elevated shot with a .22 sub-sonic, for example, but which would become far more viable with a 100ft/lb airgun pellet. While it’s clear the Wolverine will get the bulk of its orders from elsewhere in the world, especially in markets where there are no legislative restrictions on airgun power levels, I can also see this new Daystate surpassing the company’s fairly meagre expectations on the home front, too. Many UK gunmakers tell me that 10 per cent of their rifles for the UK market are already ordered in FAC power guise, and if it’s a powerful airgun that you want… well, you won’t be able to get much more powerful than this! ● Standard airgun pellets are dwarfed by JSB’s heavy-calibre Emperor .177 .20 .22 .25 .303 AIRGUN SHOOTER 19