No. Convicted felons are federally barred from owning or possessing a firearm. You may be eligible for expungement to restore your gun rights but you will need a lawyer.
A .177 caliber air rifle has very little recoil.
No
It depends on the model and the condition of the RIFLE.
The model 100 is a .177 caliber air rifle. The model 101 is a .22 Caliber rifle. Basically the same air rifle just different calibers.
The 620 is a 4.5mm or .177 caliber pellet rifle and is rated around 450 FPS.
This is a very nice air rifle. It is a .22 caliber not a .177 caliber rifle. it was made in two variations from 1957-1964. See the link below for the Owners manual.
Any air gun or rifle that uses a .177 Caliber pellet can use the Gamo .177 Red Fire Pellet. No matter who makes the air gun. The Caliber .177 is universal to all .177 caliber pellet guns or rifles.
You mean What is the best PELLETS for an air rifle. This all depends on the current rifle you own. You can not use .22 caliber pellets in a .177 caliber rifle or vise versa. As for individual calibers them it's really up to you. .177 is more common, but I prefer the .22 because it is larger and has more knock down power. I even own a .25 caliber for hunting. Match rifles use .177 caliber But unless you plan to own a $600 to $2000 match air rifle I wouldn't lets that influence me to select a .177. As the calibers get bigger the pellets get bigger. Bigger pellets fly slower but fly straighter and hit harder. .177 pellets travel very fast but are more influenced by crosswind. Beeman actually makes a interchangeable barrel rifle, one is .177 and the other is .22. It's the model RS2 at around $135 it's gives you the choice of both barrels. I'm not trying to sell you on it just letting you know what is available.
What is the estimated condition of the Benjamin model 3600. The current condition determines the value. Is it in Poor, Fair, Good, Very good or Excellent condition.Without more information it is not possible to answer you.The rifle was made between 1958 to 1964 and is a .175 caliber BB rifle not a .177 caliber bb rifle.
They are both the same size. .177
The Olympic air pistol and air rifle events use a .177 caliber pellet. The biathlon (skiing and shooting) uses a .22 caliber rim fire rifle.
It depends on the size of the hog, The size of the caliber, the weight of the pellet and if you can get in a good head shot. Assuming you are using a .177 caliber rifle. (your stretching the limits of the rifle) I would select a H&N Baracuda Match .177 Cal 10.65 grain pellet. Don't get hug up on speed. A heavy pellet will fly slower than a lightweight pellet but will fly straighter and have more knock down power than a lightweight pellet. Hopefully your going after really small hogs, because I think you are stretching the limits of you rifle if it's a .177 caliber air rifle. I recommend a larger caliber, but it's up to you.