Description
The Marauder PCP Rifle .22 is a modern classic in the world of airgunning. From its inception, the Benjamin® Marauder PCP (Pre-Charged Pneumatic) air rifle has been an icon in the hunting community. This air rifle features an integrated regulator for shot-to-shot consistency, a shrouded barrel, integrated sound suppression, a 10-round magazine, and a Picatinny breech. It has a balanced Turkish Walnut stock with an adjustable raised comb cheek-piece and reversible bolt handle. The Marauder launches .22-caliber pellets up to 1000 fps with up to 80 regulated shots per fill.
Features:
- Pre-charged pneumatic Marauder PCP Rifle .22 air rifle with fast, accurate, and reliable pellet delivery
- Balanced Turkish walnut stock with adjustable raised comb cheek-piece and reversible bolt handle
- The Marauder Regulated features an integrated regulator for shot-to-shot consistency
- Shrouded barrel with integrated sound suppression delivers superior accuracy and velocities up to 1000 fps
- 10-round auto-indexing magazine, compatible with .22-caliber pellets
- 5-year warranty
The hunting community wanted a regulated version of our beloved Marauder, and we were more than happy to oblige. This rugged air rifle is hand-assembled and meets our exceptional standards for quality. Keep it stock or customize it to your preferred specifications with top-of-the-line air gun accessories, and be sure to pick up some extra air gun ammo so you’re always ready for the next hunting trip or plinking session. The Marauder Regulated is a distinctive, heirloom-quality air gun worthy of your collection and your legacy. Make the Benjamin Marauder Regulated air rifle yours today.
DA –
I’ve had my regulated Marauder for a few years now. This is a big air gun that begs to be shot off a bench/ rested position. I love the shot to shot consistency it delivers. 80+ shots on a fill is the norm (in .22). trigger is good and can be made better. My main gripe with initial quality is that the wood on mine is plain enough to be on a popsicle stick. For the price, they could have put a little more eye appeal into the design and wood quality of the stock.
RK –
I purchased the .22 cal with Lother Walther barrel. The rifle checks all the boxes. Let me start with the Turkish Walnut stock. Using TRU-OIL -5 coats later. It brought out the grain pattern with a gloss finish that rivals 2-3k (inc-powder burners) Their literally is not an Air rifle with a wooden stock- at any price- that can rival the beauty of Benjamin‚Äôs new Turkish Walnut. I wished I could post a picture. Standard with swivel studs- it‚Äôs ready for a bipod. Being left handed and a email to service- I received an in depth instruction sheet how to convert the bolt from right to left hand. If your mechanically inclined- using the proper tools inc a inch pound meter- in slow motion it‚Äôs a simple 25 minute procedure. The included picatinny rail- allowed mme to mount a Vortex Crossfire scope 4-16 X 44 scope using Vortex medium rings to within a 1/16th of an inch to the barrel. On Walmarts site- I found that a Nikon throw lever using a slice of black heat shrink- to snug it up ($9.95) saved enough that purchasing Crossman Premier HP 14.3 grain ($6.95 per 500 at Walmart) 4tins was a no brained. Being a Tom Holland fan. I knew that the Marauder allowed true tune-ability. Shooting field and target at 35 & 55 yards. Gave me competition benchrest accuracy. I do wash and lube and sort my pellets using a pellet gauge set at 5.52 and find that I toss an average of 15 pellets aside for every 500 rounds which shows that Crossman really did a bang up job in manufacturing the Premiers specifically for the Marauder. Sure I have JSB exact diablos 18.13 grain but at $24 for a tin of 200 or their 15.89‚Äôs it‚Äôs not discernible enough in group size to spend the extra dollars. Being strictly a benchrest shooter weight is not a consideration. More importantly is the quality of manufacturing and the quality of materials used. I get a solid consistent 70 rounds with a little bit of adjusting using an FX pocket Chronograph that keeps my 14.3 grain ammo-in a solid 815-825 regulated FPS range-which along with the choked Lother Walther barrel lends to incredible accuracy. The trigger is match grade-breaks cleanly-lightly- and predictable. I have studied every airgun on the market from Air Arms-FX-Gamo, Umarex ( I own a Hajimoto Gauntlet 2 gold package in 22 caliber- however for just quality, beauty, astethically and mechanically. The Marauder is my favorite all around experience- so good I just purchased the Marauder pistol known affectionately as the P-rod. To forget about the stresses of life and shoot a Marauder- words alone – their aren‚Äôt any.
Gail Logsdon –
I have been busy but yesterday I decided to put the scope on and sight it in the Marauder. Unfortunately the magazine has the spring where the pellet should go so I can not shoot the gun with the clip magazine…does that suck or what
john Strachota –
This air rifle is the best. It shoots great, and looks great also.
Joe Shooter –
I bought my regulated Maruader back when it first came on the scene, a custom shop ordered item. Ordered mine with the Lothar Walther barrel. I have so much confidence in the accuracy of this gun (and my marksmanship skills) that I have challenged guys with the more expensive European, so-called premium guns, to a "winner takes the others gun" shoot-out. No one has yet to take me up on that challenge.
John F Smeltzer –
1st PCP so getting all of the "I’s" dotted and "T’s" crossed has taken a little longer than anticipated. Mine is a Marauder – Regulated Version with a Lothar barrel in .22 caliber …. So far so good. I like the walnut stock, finish was good but will probably do some additional polish work on it over time, still working on the scope acquisition and mounting. Have followed instructions and adjusted, checked and cleaned. But … have NOT moved to the "operations" stage of this one. Soon I hope. Shipping was smooth, packaged well, shipped quickly with no issues at all here. So …. "fill ‘er up" and get going I guess soon !!!
Randy Moore –
Upgraded the barrel and couldn’t be happier. Best shooting air rifle I have ever owned. Shooting JSB jumbo Exact and JSB Match Diablo Hades and shooting hole in hole at 50 yards.
Michael Ruggieri –
I got the Benjamin Marauder Field Target (regulated) with a Lother Walther barrel, so I can only speak for this particular setup. It’s fantastic! It’s boringly accurate…in a good way, of course! This is probably due to that Lother Walther barrel. When it arrived, I threw a scope on it and took a few shots and it was so impressive that I still haven’t borhered to clean the barrel. It is something I normally do with all new airguns, but I never had one shoot this percise out of the box, so if isn’t broke, don’t fix it. I’ll run some patches through it when pellets stop landing on top of each other. I’ve only shot at distances between 20-50 yards. This rifle hasn’t wavered a bit in that range. I’m shooting pellet on pellet, over and over again, without a single flier, and I’m not a marksman by no means. Shooting is a hobby I picked up a few years ago. I’m shooting .22’s, between 14 and 18 grain in the FPS sweet spot of about 850fps, and an FPE between 24-28ft/lbs. Typically you get about 30ft/lbs with a .22, but this regulator lowers that just a bit. It literally unnoticeable, and can be tuned via the adjustable hammer spring for different power levels, anyway. You can easily reach that 30+ FPE with a slight tune and/or heavier pellets. I haven’t tuned mine. Straight out of the box it comes tuned for a massive shot count of 80-90 "regulated" shots at about 850fps and 24-28fpe. I feel that’s perfect for my needs as a target shooter/plinker. It also has an adjustable match grade trigger. For me, that was also perfect out of the box. Its got a nice Turkish walnut stock with an adjustable cheek riser, and nice deep, grippy checkering. Being a wood and metal rifle it’s got some heft to it at about 8lbs with a scope, but it’s balanced very well and is very manageable. Being left-handed, I was happy to know the bolt can be switched to the other side. I’ve been shooting from a bench so I haven’t found the need to switch it over, but I’m planning to. Having the old-school bolt action I found the cocking action not as smooth as my lever action airguns, but it’s not difficult. It’s smooth for a bolt action rifle, and I quite like the old-school tactile feel of using the bolt. As far as magazines, I usually buy aftermarket mags for my airguns, and I did the same for this, but found that they weren’t really much of an upgrade from the stock mags. The stock mags actually function great. I did gat an aftermarket single shot flip open tray, which is very nice because the rifle doesn’t come with one. Customer service has been very responsive to all my emails. Aftermarket parts are everywhere for Marauders. So o-rings/barrel bands/ mags, etc, are very easy to find. I added a swivel stud picatinny rail and stud extension to mount a bipod and still be able to use a sling, and that’s worked out great, but I was just shooting off a bag rest at first and that was fine, too. With all that said, plus the 5 YEAR WARRANTY, you can’t go wrong with this rifle or any Marauder, because they’ve been around for a long time, so aftermarket items are all over the internet, and Crosman/Benjamin technical support are always there to help if you ever run into an issue, unlike other manufacturers. You can’t beat that. I’ve also never seen a truly negative review either, aside from random one-offs that are most likely due to user error. They really hit it out of the park with this one! My Benjamin Marauder regulated Field Target with a Lother Walther barrel is EASILY the best PCP I own. Excellent PCP at a great price point! I highly recommend it!
Spencer Kariniemi –
Nothing about the gun, but I’ve tried reaching out twice to return other items and Benjamin won’t respond.
Jonathan Lujan –
The Marauder is an amazing PCP rifle. Extremely accurate not picky with the ammo. I have put so many different quality pellets and slugs and the Marauder eat them all well. Is a true legend,