Feinwerkbau 65
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Feinwerkbau 65
I bought an old Feinwerkbau 65 air pistol yesterday.
Haven´t shot with pellets yet, but I noticed that when the pistol fires the cocking arm latch opens.
Not sure but I think it is not supposed to open by itself.. Any ideas on what might be wrong?
Latch spring is quite stiff, but who knows.
Also, pistol came with a Morini grip. Just a bit too small for me, but somewhat usable.
Are there any sources for 65(/80) grips other than Rink? Their grips are okay but cost as much as this pistol did..
Make an offer if you have Feinwerkbau 65 parts. Replacing seals might be a good idea. Also looking for parts for fwb 300 rifle & complete old fwb 5-shot co2 airpistol.
Haven´t shot with pellets yet, but I noticed that when the pistol fires the cocking arm latch opens.
Not sure but I think it is not supposed to open by itself.. Any ideas on what might be wrong?
Latch spring is quite stiff, but who knows.
Also, pistol came with a Morini grip. Just a bit too small for me, but somewhat usable.
Are there any sources for 65(/80) grips other than Rink? Their grips are okay but cost as much as this pistol did..
Make an offer if you have Feinwerkbau 65 parts. Replacing seals might be a good idea. Also looking for parts for fwb 300 rifle & complete old fwb 5-shot co2 airpistol.
I may be talking out of turn, as I've never had a 65 in my hands and my knowledge is not that thorough... but please look into whether or not a FWB 65 is supposed to be dry fired or not. I doubt that it is, and you could be doing a great deal of damage by firing it without a pellet to slow the impact of the piston.
You can only dry fire using a felt pellet. Otherwise the cylinder will slam straight into the chamber, and if you keep doing that enough, you will break the seal.
Once or twice before a competition is OK (without any pallets or felt pellets), but according to Beeman instruction, dry fire is a no no.
The older your seal is, the more of a possibility that you will damage the seals, pistol, and chamber.
Once or twice before a competition is OK (without any pallets or felt pellets), but according to Beeman instruction, dry fire is a no no.
The older your seal is, the more of a possibility that you will damage the seals, pistol, and chamber.
Last edited by conradin on Thu May 02, 2013 5:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Depends on the targets you're using. If they're Kruger or Edelmann match targets they should show clean holes at 10m with a 65. If they're the thinner 'training' targets they'll tear at anything much below 500fps, and I think the 65 is somewhat below that velocity. I know the training targets tear badly with my Baikal 46m, and it's supposed to shoot about 470fps. Same pistol cuts perfect holes on match targets. You might want to borrow a chrony to test velocity before investing in a new spring.
If you're using the cheap targets, just put a new one over the fired upon target and see what happens; or put a piece of masking tape on the back.
The "good" targets should show a clean hole. If not, go for a rebuild; after all, it's not a new gun.
When set up right, they are excellent pistols; far more competitive than people who have never shot one think.
The "good" targets should show a clean hole. If not, go for a rebuild; after all, it's not a new gun.
When set up right, they are excellent pistols; far more competitive than people who have never shot one think.
To keep a FWB65 in top condition, if it is used a couple of times a week, you need to replace seals and buffers every 12-18 months. Replace the springs every 2-3 yrs (if old single spring, upgrade to the double spring) and the piston ring every 5 yrs. This will maintain your velocity.
Also do not dry fire a FWB65 it will destroy the buffers and springs quick time. Use felt pellets or a carpet pad against the muzzle to discharge a empty 65.
This will keep it in good condition, most 65's I see nowdays have not had new parts for 10-15 yrs and are very sad. Best thing for most of them is to scrap it and buy a new pistol.
Also do not dry fire a FWB65 it will destroy the buffers and springs quick time. Use felt pellets or a carpet pad against the muzzle to discharge a empty 65.
This will keep it in good condition, most 65's I see nowdays have not had new parts for 10-15 yrs and are very sad. Best thing for most of them is to scrap it and buy a new pistol.
tearing cheep targets.
I need to hang my targets off of something 0n the carriers at my range. I use inexpensive manila file folders and tape my targets to them. the cheap targets cut cleanly with my 777.
Vincent,conradin wrote:This is not a joke right? I own a FWB65 but I never thought about dumping the pistol inside a bathtub. Or what you mean is really dealing with humidity?BenHHH wrote:"the piston ring in steel. This part allows to assure the water proofness of the cylinder".
??
I wonder if others are referring to moisture in the air that gets pumped in when the pistol is cocked? It seems logical considering hand pumps have a filter to remove moisture. Maybe SSPs need a way to keep moisture out of the cylinder too.
-s