Depending on your shooting background and your age, the Hammerli brand conjures up visions of the heyday of Olympic-style free pistol competition, athletes stock still at the firing line, a single arm extended toward the target. In the shooter’s hand was a futuristic-looking .22 with a wooden grip that encircled the firing hand. Chances are it was a Hammerli 100 or, later, a 150—for years top choices among elite shooters.
Hammerli, which traces its roots to a Swiss barrel-making company established in 1863, is still alive and well in international pistol competition, but now that it is in the hands of the PW Group—a company that owns such firms as Walther and Umarex USA—the Hammerli brand is spreading its wings.
Today, Hammerli Arms is producing two .22 rifles, the TAC…