The Best Common Sense Air Rifle for 100 Yard Benchrest

UmarexUSA-JB

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Mar 16, 2017
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Amidst a sea of expensive air rifles the Umarex Gauntlet is one that stood out at the 2019 Pyramyd Air Cup that took place August 23rd through 25th at the Cardinal Shooting Center just outside of Columbus, Ohio. The Gauntlet was the least expensive pellet rifle on the benchrest firing line, yet it and its shooter, Eydin Hansen the @TXHogDude, advanced to the final round.



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The Basics of 100 Yard Airgun Benchrest

The 100 yard benchrest competition started on Friday morning. 91 shooters spread among three heats (A, B & C) lined up to sling airgun pellets at big boards plastered with small ringed targets down range. Those panels contained five “sighter” targets located at bottom with a line separating 25 competition targets above. Each competitor engaged their targets throughout a 30 minute time span. They were allowed to shoot the sighters as many times as they desired, but only 25 rounds were to be placed above the line or a penalty of 10 points for every pellet hole over 25 would result.



Unleash The Gauntlet

As shooters prepared the various components of their airgun gear, the custom dipped Umarex Gauntlet took the stage. This never before seen Gauntlet had a modern red and black pattern coated with a polyurethane sheen. A 24 cubic inch carbon fiber bottle slated for use on the .50 caliber Umarex Hammer complemented the attractive stock and black hardware.



There was more than one Gauntlet on the line at the Pyramyd Benchrest shoot. To the competitive and more experienced airgun benchrest shooters that were equipped with the various air rifle “Cadillacs” the fact that a Gauntlet was on the line wasn’t much of a surprise. It was the fact that a stock .25 caliber Gauntlet with its original barrel and simple user-friendly mods from Hajimoto Productions and Jefferson State Air Rifles put pellets in the 10-ring during two qualifying heats sending it to the final round.



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The Umarex Gauntlet Versus Air Rifles that Cost Six Times as Much


While the Gauntlet did not make it in the top 10, Eydin Hansen, its shooter, confidently said, “I managed to put two pellets in the X (10-ring), but the wind just got me. I missed two targets completely because of it. Those misses hurt a score. I think if I spend more time with this Gauntlet in the wind I can get us in the Top 10 and in the money. The Gauntlet is capable and I had an awesome pit crew and support from Brandon, James, and Rick and JB and Brad from Umarex. The guys at Pyramyd put on a fun event!”



Of the 27 finalists on the line, the air guns used by the shooters that took the top 10 spots had average gun price tags over $1,825, not including the optic. If you chop that up by the 25 shots it takes to participate in 100 yard benchrest, that’s $73.00 a round. The Gauntlet with a base price of $299 combined with $100 worth of mod parts competes at just $16.00 a round. That’s 78% less!



Just Send Pellets Down Range

The performance of the Gauntlet at the 2019 Pyramyd Air Cup 100 yard Benchrest Competition just goes to show that you don’t have to spend a boat load of money to get in the game. #UnleashTheGauntlet and spend time putting pellets down range. We’d love to see you on the range next year wearing an Umarex Gauntlet shirt.



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Written by JB who enjoys time alone with God, is a husband and dad, looks forward to spending time outside, loves trigger time and enjoys going to work every day as Director of Marketing at Umarex USA, a family owned company.
#loversoftriggertime

 
I guess it just goes to show, it's the indian and not the arrow. :) Congrats to Eydin Hansen for being a SHOOTER!!!!

JB, put the gun in a nice walnut stock, give it a GREAT trigger out of the box, the big CF tank, and the higher pressure regulator! Add the cost in and you would still have the Cadillacs beat on price and your value to the shooter goes through the ROOF !!


 
And the .177 makes an excellent FT rifle as well. I bought one as a “loaner” for folks to use at local matches and I even take it with me to out of town matches just in case someone new wants to shoot but doesn’t have a rifle. 

When as an example, a couple of weeks ago at a match, one of the participants’ teenage daughter was with him but didn’t have a gun. After a little bit of coaxing I persuaded them to use my gauntlet. I handed her a range card and a pair of sticks to shoot HFT. I don’t recall her score but she finished 4th out of 14th. 

Her dad was extremely surprised with her success shooting such an inexpensive gun. He asked me what I had done to it and I told him the truth; adjusted the trigger per AGD video and sighted it in at 30 yards. 

I think her gauntlet arrived earlier this week and they are BOTH signed up for the upcoming Republic of Texas FT match.

IMO you don’t need to spend a truck full of cash to be competitive in HFT, have a good time and spend some father/daughter time together. 


 
"Of the 27 finalists on the line, the air guns used by the shooters that took the top 10 spots had average gun price tags over $1,825, not including the optic. If you chop that up by the 25 shots it takes to participate in 100 yard benchrest, that’s $73.00 a round. The Gauntlet with a base price of $299 combined with $100 worth of mod parts competes at just $16.00 a round. That’s 78% less!"

~~~~~~~~~

Huh?
 
Thanks for the compliment Loren. The arrow was pretty darn straight. You have to trust the gun or other factors like the wind become an unmanageable monster. This was my first competition and I was proud to take the Gauntlet to the line. My background is heavy on the hunting side so this was a new experience for me. I loved it! The red and black had some strength to it too! 
 
Clearly lots of ways to go with your first PCP or 100 yard slinger but what I believe in my case is

Buying from Pyramyd air stock gauntlet with Tyler advice

reading and video time to understand what Hajimoto says them having his modifications and learning how to tune

then PA cup competitions and all the help from fellow competitors

It all works like the precision and I am amazed by what I can learn at 60 years old!

lol