Arizona State Rifle & Pistol Association (airgun division)
Drulov 'Condor' This article I would like to start with a bit of a background about the pistol.


Drulov 'Condor'
410 fps with 7.9 pellets

Drulov 'Condor'

This article I would like to start with a bit of a background about the pistol. First it is NOT a 10 meter air pistol and never has been intended as such. It does have some fine accuracy but it is not meant for 10 meter style competition. The stock may be misleading to buyers for a 10 meter pistol, being the same shape and adjustments which has lead to some confusion in the marketplace over this gun. I might add that the grips are a very nice French walnut. However this pistol was designed as a practice pistol for an Olympic type of competition. This particular game, long gone from the games, consisted of five targets that turned to face the shooter for a period of time then turned back. The shooter placed one shot on each target. The exact times the targets faced the shooter escapes me at the moment but I am guessing 5 seconds down to 3 seconds facing as ballpark times. The competitors shooting for the national team asked Drulov to construct a pistol to come close to the existing firearm pistols; chambered in .22 short, to be used as an inexpensive alternative. From that request came the Condor, a simple pistol with a simple mechanism, easy to maintain and easy to shoot.

So let's get back to the pistol itself. It is a five shot CO2 powered repeater loaded by a non-removable magazine just in front of a fully adjustable rear sight. Pellets are dropped in a trough like affair then pushed forward either by a needle like bolt or just by tipping the pistol forward. Overall appearance is similar to a Colt 1911, basically rectangular and nothing space age. Shooters who are stricken by 'magnumitis' need not read further, since the velocity is a modest but respectable 415 fps(feet per second). It is adjustable via a slotted nut just underneath the muzzle. First a locking screw must be loosened, located under the barrel about an inch from the muzzle end. Tightening the slotted screw will increase the velocity.

Here are some tips on getting more fps. I have found this seems to apply to the vast majority of CO2 pistols provided they can be shot using bulk fill. Using the standard 12g. caplets the velocity is the least, it will increase approximately 15 fps using bulk fill. Leaving the tank attached to Condor will yield another 15 fps. In this particular repeater using one pellet at a time it will increase the velocity another 10fps as opposed to loading all five pellets at a time. Using all these tricks, Condor should be capable of velocities in the 455 fps region. Bear in mind that ambient temperatures associated with CO2 itself will increase or decrease the velocity.

Another aspect of this pistol I like is its' willingness to shoot any kind of pellet shape. Pointed, round, flat, hollow point or a mix of the any shape will feed in this system just fine. However; it is sensitive to pellet diameter which must be 4.50 mm in diameter or the CO2 will catch the skirt of the one before the first and fire several rounds at the same time. The gas travels from the back, over the pellets and fires the first one in line. Making this a very robust feeding system but quite sensitive to pellet diameter. When you purchase the pistol you do get a pellet sizer so this is not as big a problem as one would think. You also get a very nice case with all the tools you should need.

As far as I can tell there have not been that many Condors imported into this country . Shooters that seem to like this pistol are the ones that want inexpensive practice guns for one of the NRA competitions. Also it saves them traveling time to the range: They can shoot at home. The first models I have seen imported did not have a scope rail. The latest models from T.G.A.G. have a four inch scope rail already mounted directly behind the front sight. Rail width is a standard 11mm so almost anything will fit as far as mounts and optics.

Potential buyers will also like the trigger adjustments. Not as fine as a 10 meter pistol but more then enough for firearm style practice or recreational shooting. The trigger group has to be removed from the frame to access a screw that changes the sear engagement. Fine adjustments are done from the outside of the pistol. Before removing the trigger group is attempted I would recommend making any adjustments from the outside. Only if the shooter is not satisfied should the trigger group be removed. Anytime one takes a pistol apart one runs the risk of inadvertent improper adjustment (breaking something). So please take care and your own abilities into account when this is done with any gun.

Each pistol comes with a test target. My test target did not have any information about the pellet that was used but the group is not bad at all. It measured .235 c.t.c. (center to center) with one pellet enlarging the group to .533 also c.t.c. I like the idea of the one flyer since it looks like it was not a select group but indeed the group shot when the gun was tested. Not what I would consider 10 meter competition group but far better than the firearm look-a-likes that are so popular. This pistol is just plain fun to shoot. I mounted an inexpensive Daisy red dot on my pistol and use it strictly for fun. Oh, I did go on safari in the storage shed. So far the Condor fed on six, not quite trophy size, mice.

Other airgun articles By Rada Plesinger ....

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