Over the past weekend I received a Marauder in .22 caliber that I had waited over seven weeks for. The business I bought the rifle through had tested five others before assuring me that if I waited I would end up with a better performing machine. I have been reading about the rifle on a few different forums since it hit the market. I was well aware of the problems in the first series of rifles, and kept the hype in check. After reading more and more positive reviews of the rifle, and that most of the production problems had worked themselves out, I felt that it was a safe investment and approached the initial testing of the rifle with realistic expectations.
The build quality impressed me. The rifle is clean, solid and well balanced. The bolt and magazine worked smoothly and flawlessly. I'm bigger than average, and the stock fit me well. It doesn't feel heavy or long either. The gauge on the rifle worked as well as the gauge on the fill tank and filling was simple and safe.
The rifle is very quiet. While that will be subjective and open to interpretation, you just have to hear it for yourself. The trigger is crisp, and a bit heavy from the factory, for obvious reasons. The shot cycle is quick, with little recoil or mechanical noise. Through two hundred shots, using JSB 15.9 and JSB 18.1, I never experienced a jam or misfeed. Loading the magazine moves quickly once you learn how it works.
I shot two strings over a chronograph. 75 shots with the 18.1 and 50 with the 15.9. I took three pages of notes along with pictures and finished up with a bit of a hunt. Throughout the chrono testing, I shot at a NRA 10m rimfire target to get an idea of pellet distribution. I set up at a laser range finder measured 50 yards, prone, and rested on a bag. The temperature was ~65F, relative humidity at ~75%, with little wind, constant from left to right at ~2-5MPH. This is an area that I shoot at almost every day and I know it well. I should mention that I was shooting through a new, high quality scope and rings and parallax was adjusted out.
I started the 18.1 JSBs at 3000psi and shot to 1400psi. In my assessment, pellet placement was not affected by MV or psi. In fact, the consistency of the MV was contradictory to the distribution of the pellet at the target. The 15.9 JSBs showed the same tendency for accuracy as the heavier pellet. I started the 15.9 test at 2900 and did not record a finish pressure. MV consistency was fair, and I will acknowledge that tuning would increase efficiency, ES and SD, and power output. Running through 1600 psi gave me a fair representation of speeds from 700 to 830, with the 18.1. Remarkably similar speeds were shown for the lighter pellet, as well.
In short, this Marauder proved itself to be the most inaccurate rifle I have ever used. Groups sizes at 33 yards were ~5" with both pellet weights. Removing the baffles and end cap to check for clipping, (there was no substantial clipping), and shooting a group without them installed showed no difference in accuracy.
I shoot daily. I shoot a 35 year old Sheridan pumper well enough to hit shotgun shells at 40 yards and a Diana 34 well enough to claim 1" groups at 45. Both are using open sights. I own a chinese break barrel springer, tuned by a well known professional, that makes 26FPE at the muzzle. As you can imagine, this rifle is not easy to shoot well. But group sizes at fifty yards with roughly the same FPE as the Marauder are at least half of what the Marauder posted at 33 yards. I am familiar with safe and effective shooting practices and am comfortable enough to say that I am qualified to judge this Marauder by it's performance. After shooting over two hundred quality pellets through the rifle, over a period of six hours, and using competent techniques, I have to say that I am utterly disappointed. The truth is that I cannot hit a three inch target at 33 yards with this rifle using ten quality pellets and a fair degree of skill.
I really like the Marauder and believe that it's powerplant can work well and lends itself to "home tuning". I really want to keep the rifle. But it needs to out perform a break barrel springer that makes the same energy before I can say it's worth half of what I paid for it. I don't believe that anyone who could shoot this rifle would be satisfied with it's performance. I also don't believe that this rifle is representative of Crosman. I have heard nothing but positive reports about Crosman customer service, and have read many reviews, including every review on pyramydair.com, that claim the Marauder is the rifle of the decade. Alternatively, if I had the resources, I would happily send the rifle to Mr. Greg Davis and probably never buy another PCP.
Luckily I am dealing with a very professional shop who values integrity and is devoted to customer satisfaction so I am confident that this matter will resolve itself satisfactorily. I know that a bad experience usually leads people to talk more about it than someone with a good experience. I didn't come here to bash the rifle. I genuinely and sincerely like the rifle. I only came here to share my story, possibly to those who are considering buying the rifle, and to get feedback from the forum members here as to what I should expect in the future, what they would do in my situation, and maybe how they worked around some negative aspects of their Marauders performance.
Thanks for your time.