Crosman Ratcatcher

  • Hey Guest, Early bird pricing on the Summer Moot (29th July - 10th August) available until April 6th, we'd love you to come. PLEASE CLICK HERE to early bird price and get more information.

Riven

Full Member
Dec 23, 2006
428
136
England
Hi all, anyone have any experience of the Crosman Ratcatcher(2250).
Are they any good? Do they have any faults or limitations. Is it capable of taking out bunnies and pidgeons?
I want something light and portable and these seem to fit the bill. Handled one over the weekend at Chatsworth Fair but didn't get to shoot it so not sure about power etc.
Any info appreciated, Riven.
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,728
1,974
Mercia
Its not a hunting gun - pushes out hardly more than 8 ft lbs. Not a gun for the responsible hunter - but a great fun gun for tin cans - which is all its meant for.
 

chimpy leon

Full Member
Jul 29, 2013
548
145
staffordshire
Its not a hunting gun - pushes out hardly more than 8 ft lbs. Not a gun for the responsible hunter - but a great fun gun for tin cans - which is all its meant for.

+1

I personally would not shoot any living creature with anthing less than a reliably consistant 11 ft lbs, rat or otherwise. More chance of a good, clean kill. Ratcatcher is just a modified air pistol, and as BR said for plinking cans, not as a humane hunting tool.
 

Riven

Full Member
Dec 23, 2006
428
136
England
Thanks for that Red, clearly not what I am looking for then. Can,t eat tin cans so no good to me.
Cheers, Riven.
 

Black Sheep

Native
Jun 28, 2007
1,539
0
North Yorkshire
photobucket.com
Its not a hunting gun - pushes out hardly more than 8 ft lbs. Not a gun for the responsible hunter - but a great fun gun for tin cans - which is all its meant for.

True in it's standard form but with a few carefully modifications a 2250 can produce 11+ ft lbs. Most parts are available on the web from companies that specialise in Crosman 2200 range.

I know I own and have worked on a few;)

All depends what your after.


Richard
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,728
1,974
Mercia
I'm sure it can be tweaked Richard :)

Then again, if the OP is asking the question, I suspect he is referring to a "stock" configuration - if he knows how to tune one, he wouldn't have to ask :)
 

chimpy leon

Full Member
Jul 29, 2013
548
145
staffordshire
If your hunting on a regular basis, then I'd recommend budgeting for a good second hand, full power springer. Say a break-barrel weirauch or similar. You should be able to get a decent set up for not much more than the price of a ratcatcher + scopes and mounts.
 

Countryman

Native
Jun 26, 2013
1,652
74
North Dorset
Chimpy Leon makes a good point. Certainly the way I would go.

You can up the performance of a Rat Catcher considerably but the short barrel and therefore lower sight radius will kill its effective range with its iron sights. They can be fitted with a scope but to be honest at in-barn ranges where it might be useful you want quick target acquisition.

It's not really the tool for vermin control.
 

Andy BB

Full Member
Apr 19, 2010
3,290
1
Hampshire
For rats at short range its excellent - remember that in the "old" days the typical hunting air-rifles such as the Vulcan, meteor etc were putting out similar ft/lb performances. Surprisingly accurate - possibly because it has a single-shot bolt action, but relatively short barrel means its not a 30-yard weapon.

Power is always a subjective subject - there are many who say anything under 30-ft/lb is irresponsible. But rabbit skulls only need 3-4ft/lb for an instant kill. Just make sure you're up to hitting the skull before trying it!
 

Gray

Full Member
Sep 18, 2008
2,091
10
Scouser living in Salford South UK
I wouldnt, even with a power adjuster chrono'd in at full power, as already stated the short barrel defo limits the range and in the winter the cold weather causes a considerable pressure drop in the co2 and the reverse in the summer. If you have it tweaked to full power at winter time or in cold conditions, when it warms up the chances are it'll be over 12 fpe which means without a fac, your breaking the law. I was in my local gunshop on friday and he's got a clean 2nd hand HW80, probably one of the best springers ever made for £180. No way i'd choose a ratcatcher over that tbh.
 

Jonbodthethird

Settler
Sep 5, 2013
548
0
Kettering/Stilton
Honestly buddy they will go about 30 yards accurately anything more then that I wouldn't try it.. Get a decent air rifle for longer shots. I've got a weihrauch hw97kt and tuned it! I can take down pests at 70/80 yards fairly easily its definitely the Best spring gun there is with a good v mach spring. My AA s410 also a good solid hunting gun for the money too.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk - now Free
 

Welshwizard

Forager
Aug 11, 2011
213
0
Abergavenny Wales
Even with the power upped on these the trigger does not aid accuracy in its standard form , as others have said go for a Weihrauch or AA prosport etc in springers or if its within your budget a good multishot PCP rifle .
 

Tomcoles

Settler
Jul 21, 2013
537
0
Buckinghamshire
You would be better off with a stick to kill a bunny than a rat catcher. Buy a decent springer follow what mr red has advised or save up and buy a pcp otherwise u will be wasting money and become dissappointed
uqahe5ez.jpg



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

stonepark

Tenderfoot
Jun 28, 2013
96
49
Carse of Gowrie
Hi all, anyone have any experience of the Crosman Ratcatcher(2250).
Any info appreciated, Riven.

If you are capable of knocking a few pins out and some basic handiness, would be better looking at a modded 1377 to 2250 configuration, barrel,stock and a flat topped piston will give you 11 to 12ftlb. Do a search on google or crosman owners forum.

sent from my android
 

ozzy1977

Full Member
Jan 10, 2006
8,558
3
46
Henley
The accuracy is still dubious even if it has been tweaked, and you would also need a chrono to check you have not gone over limit
 
I used to Use a Ratcatcher for rats and feral Pigeons but only close up and in barns etc at night with NVD so 10-15yrds (Yes i did get a Defrea Licence for birds at night with illumination etc)
Was in airgunner artical many years back Terry Doe came out to meet me even bought fish n chipps ;)

it was Highly tweaked and putting out just over 10ft lbs (to get 12 you needed a longer barrel) with heavy pellets

Wouldnt use it for rabbits or longer than the 15yrds ish on the Rats etc CO2 is also very finicky on temperature affecting the ME/MV
 

NikDarkwood

Member
Sep 2, 2009
28
0
65
Hampshire
I''ve had a great ratcatcher for years, it's accurate, tuned to just below the legal limit and running on hpa gets between 100 and 300 shots per refill. It's a tack driver out to perhaps 40m and takes down very small with the simple addition of a backpacker stock quick release button. However it is hideously ugly. Most people I shoot with are snobs so I tend to use a mk2 airsporter to avoid ill informed ribaldry.
I don't like co2, it's too temperature sensitive but the air conversion was cheap simple and safe. (12oz bottle as fore stock.) If you don't like co2 or charging cylinders it is possible to built a self contained legal multi pump carbine based on other crosman components that's accurate, reliable and powerfull enough for rabbits. It will cost you almost as much as a quality second hand Springer but will have the advantage of being easier to work on and a fraction of the size and weight. Traditionalists will hate you however :)
 

Samon

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Mar 24, 2011
3,970
44
Britannia!
I''ve had a great ratcatcher for years, it's accurate, tuned to just below the legal limit and running on hpa gets between 100 and 300 shots per refill. It's a tack driver out to perhaps 40m and takes down very small with the simple addition of a backpacker stock quick release button. However it is hideously ugly. Most people I shoot with are snobs so I tend to use a mk2 airsporter to avoid ill informed ribaldry.
I don't like co2, it's too temperature sensitive but the air conversion was cheap simple and safe. (12oz bottle as fore stock.) If you don't like co2 or charging cylinders it is possible to built a self contained legal multi pump carbine based on other crosman components that's accurate, reliable and powerfull enough for rabbits. It will cost you almost as much as a quality second hand Springer but will have the advantage of being easier to work on and a fraction of the size and weight. Traditionalists will hate you however :)


Spot on. Hpa (high powered air/PCP conversion) transforms the toys into ugly but capable tools. Sticking with costly co2 can still give you full power but with only around 10 shots or so with the standard capsule.

The best thing about the rat series is the customisability, there is a shed load of bits to stick on them!

Here's my 2240 ratbuster I spent some time on,





I did trigger mod's,custom grips, moderator, stock, scope, steel breech and brass hardware. Great fun and I ran it at pistol power and took out rats at under 10m humanely.

At 10m I could do this, not bad for such a light weight gun,



 

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE