Download Free Healthways Plainsman 175 Manualidades
Download >>Download Healthways plainsman 175 manual muscle Read Online >>Read Online Healthways plainsman 175 manual muscle healthways plainsman repair plainsman. Reference manual free ebook Redring selectronic manual woodworkers Aprilia pegaso 660 service manual Vtech telephone 58 ghz manualidades Harman kardon ts11 manual Zappos z 805 manuale digital e Sportcraft ex600 user manual Drift hd ghost instruction manual Healthways plainsman 175 manual lawn.
Healthways Plainsman 175 that used the larger 12gr.co2 units,these gun's are Marksman Plainsman gun's NOT. Flexsim user guide - free eBooks download. 75 Manual - godupload. Healthways Plainsman 1. Plainsman 175 Manual The original owners manual, adjustment tool.
Pelletier I wanted to title this report Americana, because that’s what it really is. But when someone on the internet wants to research their gun, the model is the only thing they are interested in. Make no mistake, though–the Healthways Plainsman is Americana, as much as Dad’s Root Beer and Buster Brown shoes. Unlike the Daisy Red Ryder that everyone knows by name, the Healthways Plainsman is the BB pistol that almost everybody knows on sight, without knowing what it is. It’s about as ubiquitous as the, but most of you may have to think about it for awhile. And showing you a period ad may stimulate your memories. A Plainsman ad from 1965.
They called the gun semiautomatic because you just keep pulling the trigger to fire. Actually it’s double-action.
I DID NOT go to Roanoke to buy a Plainsman! In fact, I have assiduously avoided the Plainsman for the past 20 years. Before that, I wasn’t a writer, so my avoidance was private and didn’t count. I have blogged Chinese spring guns. I have blogged Marksman BB pistols.
I have even blogged Wamo cap-firing BB guns that have less power than thrown BBs. So, why was I avoiding the Plainsman?
No good reason. In fact, this is a great little BB gun that I actually shot in my youth. My favorite relative was Uncle Don.
He was a man’s man. Whenever we got together, he got out his guns and let me shoot. One summer I spent a couple weeks with him and Aunt Gert on the shores of the St. Lawrence River. There, he introduced me to his Plainsman. It shot fast and hard–two things a 12-year-old boy likes. I went through so much of his CO2 that he had to put the brakes on and get me fishing to slow me down.
But I never owned one of these pistols myself; and when the time came to get airguns, I went other ways. In this report, I want to discover what I missed–right along with you. Download Subtitles Labyrinth Of Lies there. I stumbled across this pistol on Mike Ahuna’s table at the Roanoke airgun show last weekend.
It was in the box and included an owner’s manual, sales receipt (without the year of sale, unfortunately) and several other papers associated with both the gun and with Numrich Arms (the former name of Gun Parts Corporation), where it was sold. I’ve seen plenty of other boxed Plainsmans–there was even one at this show–but the condition of this box and papers caught my attention. The gun sang to me! The Plainsman box looks like a big smile to me. It looks happy, and it makes me feel happy to look at it. The timeframe I’ve found ads for the Plainsman pistol as early as 1960 and as late as 1969.
With just a quick check, let’s assume I missed some and extend that by a couple years on both ends. The owner’s manual that came with the gun is dated 1957, which may be the first year of release.
The earliest price I’ve seen in 1960 is $14.95. On the late end of the run, there would have been new-old-stock guns for sale for several years after they stopped making them, so they no doubt were sold well into the 1970s.
But companies like Daisy were putting pressure on the market with newer guns made of plastic and having the same features and more modern profiles. The final price I saw in 1969 was $18.95. Pat Pending must have been a prolific airgun designer, because we see his name on so many guns from the 1950s and ’60s. Seriously, that was a dodge used by many companies to avoid the costly fees and time spent in getting patents.