First of all, I'm not sure the basic polish and lube really qualifies as tuning but it can do wonders. Second, thanks to everyone on the board who has contributed along with the search feature and Google. I'm pretty sure I've read every tuning post on this board. Lastly, all you pro tuners out there - you will have no competition from me. I think the price you guys charge is probably not enough.
I made a few mistakes, hehe. On the first attempt, I under lubed and did not hone the compression chamber. The seal may have been a little too tight to allow any lube to get by. All fifty shots were squeakers. On the second attempt I honed and relubed everything. I believe a few thousandths had worn off the seal and the result was dieseling. Go figure. On the third attempt I degreased everything again and installed another seal. I also cleaned the barrel to remove any residue from the dieseling. Did I mention that I love my spring compressor?
The results are great, so far. I've put about 50 pellets through it and they just keep getting better. No squeaking or dieseling even on the first couple of pellets. At 10 yards I'm getting better than clover leafs with high test caffeine and nicotine to boot. The first five shots were in a dime. The recoil seems to be straight back as opposed to the wild torque to the right before the tune. Pellet impact is now louder than the action. Just a thud. Hold sensitivity has also gone way down. The difference between resting on a gel pad or my palm is about a one inch vertical change to the POI.
This is a Gamo Viper with a CDT trigger that has about 1000 pellets through it total. I was very confident about the barrel before I even started. And Charlie's trigger gets even better when you drop it in a tub of Gene Sunday's Mystery Oil and let it drip dry for about 24 hours, by the way. I also did a very light polishing of all contact surfaces.
To continue this craziness, I picked up a used 1377 at a gun show over the weekend.
Thanks again.
Rob