AirMaks Arms at The British Shooting Show
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This shoots and fires fine, you have to pull the cocking lever twice as instructed to fire it. I printed off the instruction sheet from the net but it needs printing more clearly, you can find it on the net and do for yourself.
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From the info below copied and pasted from Wikipedia I calculate this is a Type 1 and a 1981 model because it has the skeletonised stock because in 1981, a composite skeletonized shoulder stock (Model 1399) was introduced as a factory option by Crosman, converting the pistol into a carbine.
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The Model 1322 is a pneumatic pump-action air pistol utilizing .22 (5.5 mm) caliber lead pellets. The pistol's integral pump lever mechanism is located underneath the barrel, integral to the forearm. This pump lever is cycled a variable number of times (up to a maximum of ten strokes) to store increasingly pressurized air in a chamber. When the trigger is activated, an air valve dumps the pressurized air into a transfer port integral to the breech, discharging the pellet from the barrel.
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According to the manufacturer, a maximum velocity of up to 440 ft/s (130 m/s) was achievable with ten pump strokes, using standard 14.3-grain .22 pellets. The Model 1322 features fully adjustable square notch rear and front fixed blade sights.
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The Model 1322 was a development of the earlier Crosman Model 1300 Medalist II in .22 caliber, produced from 1970-1976. The Model 1322 was first introduced in 1977, and was produced over its lifetime in three distinct variants: Type I, 1977–81, Type II, made from 1978-1996, and Type III, 1998-2004.
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Type I featured a sliding metal breech cover, manual cocking using a three-ring external cocking knob, and a steel breech.