It's great that you're doing reviews on some of these less popular or less known air guns. Have you seen or tested the other Isaazon pistol? It's a CO2 pellet pistol with a revolver clip that goes in it. I saw it on Amazon but haven't found any video reviews of it. It does look pretty cool though and might be fun.
@@rustbeltairgun8718 I've been trying to find that one again but haven't been able to locate it, unfortunately, because I really wanted one. Oh well you never know with this chinese stuff. I do enjoy the cheap chinese guns though. I have a B1 rifle and the B3 also, both in .22 and both have proven to be very reliable, although quite rough in places.
Thanks, it was garbage picked many years ago. I had to replace the original broken movement that ran on household current with a battery-powered quartz movement.
Thanks for making this content. I was unaware of this gun and will now be looking into it (through your link). I don't know how the Isaazon pistol works, but I do know that you're incorrect about the power plant on the Beeman. It is a single pump pneumatic mechanism that has nothing to do with nitro gas pistons or nitrogen in any form, other than what is naturally dissolved in the air we breathe. I suspect that you will find that the Isaazon pistol works the same way, since the internals under the "slide" look identical. BTW, the button that you pointed to on the right side of the grip wouldn't have been the safety anyway. On the firearm that button would release the magazine from the grip. I agree that it would be nice to have adjustable sights, but if it shoots to point of aim at 8-12 yards, it's less important. The safety on the Beeman is auto-setting after every cocking and it's a pain in the butt. If you have this gun loaded and cocked and decide that you need to set it down, just open it back up. Just looking at the ease with which you are able to close this gun, I'd say that the piston is smaller or has a shorter stroke than the Beeman's. They are very hard to close, especially for young shooters and that would also explain the lower velocity. I view that as a plus. Another plus is the fact that the Isaazon looks to be a fairly true replica of the 1911, as far as grip angle and trigger style. As a 1911 owner, I would give that a big plus because of the low cost practice it allow. Speaking of practice, what about dry firing? On the Beeman guns you can partially open the gun until you hear a click, then close it with no effort and no air stored. That sets the trigger and now you can practice trigger control and hold/follow through, without all the effort of fully charging the gun. Does this gun do the same? For those who asked about the .22 caliber version, I suspect that getting a .22 barrel from Beeman and installing it would be simple enough. It is with the Beeman gun.
Both the Isaazon PP01 and the Beeman 2004 are pneumatic and not gas-charged. A mistake on my part. Despite my mistake, it was still an apples-to-apples comparison. On the Isaazon, they could have used the button typically used for the magazine release as a cross-bolt safety. I was unable to duplicate the dry-fire steps, with the Isaazon PP01, that you described.
I bought one of the guns on the strength of your review, so there's a few pennies for your Amazon link. LOL Should be here tomorrow.@@rustbeltairgun8718
Thanks, for a while, I was using High Energy Trance Music, similar to what I listened to in my youth. I soon found out that the demographics of the followers did not like it :-)
Interesting comparison. But I have one comment. The rear sight in this gun can be adjusted horizontally. When you lift the slide, you will notice that the rear sight is secured with a small screw. when you unscrew it slightly, you can move the sight left or right and then tighten it in the selected position
My pp01 has an adjustable rear sight. Scew is on the underside. Its totally adjustable, left or right. Im liking mine alot. I got a laser sight mounted, was an ebay pistol-laser combo, and its accurate. Has good power. Built very well. I give it 5 stars 🏁🤓👍
Thanks for the tip, I missed that the rear sight was adjustable during my review. I wish the manufacturer included an instruction manual that included this information.
Nice review That would be a mag release button and not a safety on the 1911. Not having an automatic safety like the Beeman is a good thing in my view All guns need safe handling regardless of safety or not Keep your booger picker off the bang button until ready to shoot
Since this air pellet pistol does not have a removable magazine, they could have used this button as a cross-bolt safety. This would have added a few pennies to each unit.
not my choice pistol. music is great Thanks for review!
Nice, fairly accurate air pistol with classic looks but the lack of a safety is a concern...
I agree, and was very surprised that no Safety mechanism was present.
Great to see your new videos. Really enjoyed this one, agree with the other comments about no safety though particularly as a single stroke.
Thanks for watching!
Nice looking but i do like a safety on all my weapons thank you for the instructions!!
I know, seems like a block safety behind the trigger would be an easy addition.
It's great that you're doing reviews on some of these less popular or less known air guns. Have you seen or tested the other Isaazon pistol? It's a CO2 pellet pistol with a revolver clip that goes in it. I saw it on Amazon but haven't found any video reviews of it. It does look pretty cool though and might be fun.
I have not, can you send me the link to it?
@@rustbeltairgun8718 I've been trying to find that one again but haven't been able to locate it, unfortunately, because I really wanted one. Oh well you never know with this chinese stuff. I do enjoy the cheap chinese guns though. I have a B1 rifle and the B3 also, both in .22 and both have proven to be very reliable, although quite rough in places.
Also I love your retro clock in the background .
Thanks, it was garbage picked many years ago. I had to replace the original broken movement that ran on household current with a battery-powered quartz movement.
Glad your back
Thank You!
Thanks for making this content. I was unaware of this gun and will now be looking into it (through your link).
I don't know how the Isaazon pistol works, but I do know that you're incorrect about the power plant on the Beeman. It is a single pump pneumatic mechanism that has nothing to do with nitro gas pistons or nitrogen in any form, other than what is naturally dissolved in the air we breathe. I suspect that you will find that the Isaazon pistol works the same way, since the internals under the "slide" look identical. BTW, the button that you pointed to on the right side of the grip wouldn't have been the safety anyway. On the firearm that button would release the magazine from the grip.
I agree that it would be nice to have adjustable sights, but if it shoots to point of aim at 8-12 yards, it's less important. The safety on the Beeman is auto-setting after every cocking and it's a pain in the butt. If you have this gun loaded and cocked and decide that you need to set it down, just open it back up. Just looking at the ease with which you are able to close this gun, I'd say that the piston is smaller or has a shorter stroke than the Beeman's. They are very hard to close, especially for young shooters and that would also explain the lower velocity. I view that as a plus. Another plus is the fact that the Isaazon looks to be a fairly true replica of the 1911, as far as grip angle and trigger style. As a 1911 owner, I would give that a big plus because of the low cost practice it allow.
Speaking of practice, what about dry firing? On the Beeman guns you can partially open the gun until you hear a click, then close it with no effort and no air stored. That sets the trigger and now you can practice trigger control and hold/follow through, without all the effort of fully charging the gun. Does this gun do the same?
For those who asked about the .22 caliber version, I suspect that getting a .22 barrel from Beeman and installing it would be simple enough. It is with the Beeman gun.
Both the Isaazon PP01 and the Beeman 2004 are pneumatic and not gas-charged. A mistake on my part.
Despite my mistake, it was still an apples-to-apples comparison.
On the Isaazon, they could have used the button typically used for the magazine release as a cross-bolt safety.
I was unable to duplicate the dry-fire steps, with the Isaazon PP01, that you described.
I bought one of the guns on the strength of your review, so there's a few pennies for your Amazon link. LOL Should be here tomorrow.@@rustbeltairgun8718
Great music intro and review , thank you .
Thanks, for a while, I was using High Energy Trance Music, similar to what I listened to in my youth. I soon found out that the demographics of the followers did not like it :-)
Interesting comparison. But I have one comment. The rear sight in this gun can be adjusted horizontally. When you lift the slide, you will notice that the rear sight is secured with a small screw. when you unscrew it slightly, you can move the sight left or right and then tighten it in the selected position
Great Information! Thanks for sharing :-)
how do you load the damn thing?
Any link for a 22cal version?
Sorry, I don't know a venue that sells the .22 variant.
My pp01 has an adjustable rear sight. Scew is on the underside. Its totally adjustable, left or right.
Im liking mine alot. I got a laser sight mounted, was an ebay pistol-laser combo, and its accurate. Has good power. Built very well. I give it 5 stars 🏁🤓👍
Thanks for the tip, I missed that the rear sight was adjustable during my review. I wish the manufacturer included an instruction manual that included this information.
@@rustbeltairgun8718 you should make a mini video showing the screw. Can you edit it into the video that's up now?
Nice review
That would be a mag release button and not a safety on the 1911. Not having an automatic safety like the Beeman is a good thing in my view
All guns need safe handling regardless of safety or not
Keep your booger picker off the bang button until ready to shoot
Since this air pellet pistol does not have a removable magazine, they could have used this button as a cross-bolt safety. This would have added a few pennies to each unit.
I don't understand why you respected the same difference just in different was as to being even more specific that's seemed repetitive.
I really like your videos hate the music you play...🙄
Thanks for the feedback.