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I'm not considering a mid-handle. You and Pastor make a good case for them but they few and far between here - and my modest catches don't justify importing a custom Wong or Tommy Botha. In poor viz/confined gulleys, having great range is not really a benefit, although I guess it helps when the water clears, as it often does.Hiya
Mr.X, your biggest challenge is going to be switching from a rear handle to a mid-handle. Both guns shoot very differently and it will be difficult to get accustomed to switching between the two. If your primary gun is rear handled, best to get your secondary, dirty water gun to be rear handled too.
Another factor influencing your purchase is the brand you currently use. Sometimes various manufacturer's gun will shoot differently to one another. Thats why you often hear of spearo's using a railgun for the first time and complaining that the gun is in-accurate!! If possible, try and stick to the same brand of gun you currently have. This way, you are always comfortable with the grip, safety(if you use it!!) and the way it shoots.
Mid-handles are AWESOME!! I can't understand why so very few euro spearo's use them!! Understandably, for cave/crevice hunting a small rear handle works well, but for any other type of spearing, a mid-handle is superb!!
Regards
miles
You're right about shipping & tax. Our govt. constantly push aid for Africa while at the same time levying punitive taxes on the goods they produce:duh. The customs guys have a book of weird and arbitrary taxes for hand carried goods brought into the country...did you know they levy a different tax for electric guitars than for acoustic guitars (on top of VAT)!:head:head:headIt's the same here I'm afraid, shipping and tax kill the trade in these guns. If your in the states though you could always bring one back with you and avoid that.
I think the slim XXV Gold gives it's best in the 90cm size.
In facts I think the 90 is a very paculiar size of gun. It's a gun for agguato, for short shots ranging from 3 meters, three meters and a half, but still it's quite a long weapon, with a length that makes it not so easy to handle in narrow spaces and/or in short visibility. It's got to be slim, it must be light and very manouverable.
On the contrary, for longer guns, from 100+, I prefer guns with a bigger mass to endure the recoil of a more powerful shot. But also as a shorter one I'm loving my Gabbiano 77: it's significantly bulkier and a bit harder to swing than the XXV 82 I had, but for such a short gun this is no serious issue. I mean, a 75/82 gun is so short and compact that it will be acceptably easy to swing even if it has some "mass" to make it sturdier and a bit more accurate.
To resume, for what it's worth, my personal preferences go to the Omer XXV Gold for size 90 and to Seatec Gabbiano 77 for the 75/77/82 category.
These could sound like some weird statements, but I'm sure you understand and, eventually, some will agree.
That's very interesting. I like the idea of a shorter spear -- perhaps that is only possible on the railed XXV Gold & not on the plain carbon tube of the regular XXV? You don't think they sent the wrong spear, perhaps to save on shipping?Mr X, just to clear up the length thing on my Omer Gold XXV 90. It uses a shorter spear than a "standard" 90cm gun. This makes the OmerGold XXV 90 only 5cm longer than a "standard" 75cm gun.
Thanks Clive. Those are useful insights. I don't dive as deep as you but the water quality/vis. I encounter will be similar. I am looking for a "Dorset gun" - although Devon features in my plans for this year too - so very appropriate. I don't expect to use a second band but it's nice to have options. 60lb!for what it's worth, and I have dived Dorset for many years now, I use a 75 in he summer unless the viz is exceptional, in which case I use my 90. In the winder I never use any more than a 60. All Beauchat guns with 6.5mm Cressi spears and 20mm rubbers. I do have a 115 Beauchat but only use that in the Med or Azores..... all my guns only use a single rubber. My mate shot a 60lb Amber Jack in the Azores with a singe 18mm rubber (C4 carbon gun) and landed it without any problems, so that shows you don't really need a double rubbers.
That's worth knowing. I wonder if folk are just being verly pessimistic or if there is some basis for this? The trigger mech. would have to be up to it too. I guess the railed Gold model would likely be the stronger & more rigid of the two models. [Spaghetti, stop reading now]Should I expect the build quality of Alfa Romeo/Fiat (cars with a great reputation for soul but not so much for robust reliability)? I'm not keen on fragile products - with me, they will break, simple & robust tends to work betterX
It is funny for me to see the gold with double band, sometime ago when some one ask why this gun was not sold in U.S., the reply from Mark Labocceta was people would likely to double band and that may cause breakage.
About the shaft size, in Brazil I never like those long shafts, the ones that stick out too much, the shaft diameter is also a factor on the gun mobility.
Using multiple bands will also make it harder to track, somewhat losing the intent of the gun.
have your noticed your 90cm XXV being shorter overall than your Comanche 90?
So, we'd expect the 82cm version to be 3cm shorter overall than a regular 75! That would be good. Also, the 75cm might be as much as 10cm shorter overall that a regular 75...the same length as a "standard" 65cm gun. While that would help compactness (which will be a factor if fishing gulleys/caves or strapping the gun to a float), any reduction in tracking drag would likely be fairly small, I would think, as the tube produces the majority of the drag rather than the thin spear, especially as euro-barbs lay flat (but perhaps I am wrong, the longer length of the spear will give it a proportionally larger turning moment). If the above is correct, I think either size would work well (given the thin 25mm tube diameter): the 82 acting like a 75 with the range of an 82 (-3cm); the 75 would likely give the 70cm performance I was looking but with the range of a 75 (-10cm) - those are attractive combinations.
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