Ruger 10/22 vs CZ 455

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Ruger 10/22 VS CZ 455

Two different rifles with two different action types and two different purposes. Not trying to do a show of which rifle is more accurate. I think we all know which one is the more accurate rifle. I'm also not trying to show which one is better. However, Id like to show a comparison of how well the 10/22 stacks up against a 455. New PAL holders may find this interesting and aid them in the purchase of their first rifle assuming they're going for a .22 as their first rifle. I'm also not going to be comparing which gun has plastic and which one has metal. That's just boring. Both rifles are famous for their intended purpose and loved by many. That's why I have them both. This thread may be a long read but there will also be pictures and hopefully it will be useful information for someone.

Ruger 10/22 Deluxe Sporter



Action Type - Semi Automatic

Stock - American Walnut

Caliber - .22LR

Capacity - 10

Length of Pull - 13.88"

Twist 1:16 RH

Barrel Length 18.5"

Scope Bushnell Rimfire Scope. 3-9x32mm

Retail $380 CAD

The Ruger 10/22 comes in many configurations. They even have special ones that only some retailers can sell. The one being used today for my test is a 10/22 Deluxe Sporter. The only thing the Deluxe Sporter has over a Standard is the stock. Other than that, they're pretty well the same gun so if you intend to get an aftermarket stock for your 10/22, don't get the Deluxe. The rifle has an aftermarket titanium extractor and an aftermarket low profile scope rail. Other than that, its stock from the factory. The trigger isn't the greatest but I don't see the 10/22 as a bench rest target rifle. Its a plinking rifle and that is where it's purpose differs from the CZ. Both could be used as a small game hunting rifle and both would do an excellent job in that roll (my 10/22 has claimed 2 grouse) but the Ruger is a plinking rifle for can's, spent shotgun shells, clay birds, steel targets, and quick shooting. You very well could use it as a target rifle if you really want but its going to get schooled by the CZ and many other rimfire rifles every time. I'm sure with the massive amount of aftermarket parts out there for the 10/22, you can make it a tack driver if you really want to. The rifle is using a Bushnell Rimfire scope. They're cheap. Nothing fancy about them but they work.

CZ 455 FS



Action Type - Bolt Action

Stock - Turkish Walnut

Caliber - .22LR

Capacity - 5

Length of Pull - 14.25"

Twist 1:16 RH

Barrel Length 20.5"

Scope Bushnell Elite 2-7x32mm

Retail $650 CAD

The CZ 455 is the newer version of the 452. Its pretty much the same gun with some minor differences. I even compared this rifle to an 80's Brno my friend has and there isn't much different. The 80's Brno had a rear sight similar to an AK or SKS style but that's about it. Duel extractors, smooth bolt, and a really sold feel, the CZ's have a well deserved popularity. This one is the 455 FS. Its main difference from other 455 rifles is its full length stock. The trigger is really good. It doesn't take much pressure to get it to go and that good trigger really shows on paper. The 455 with decent quality .22 is capable of groups at 100 meters that some centerfire hunting rifles struggle to get with factory ammunition. It is a tack driver out of the box at 50 meters. I was, in fact, using tacks on the target bored as targets for this rifle. The rifle is using a Bushnell Elite. The scope is considered cheap for a centerfire rifle but on this .22, It may be perfect or overkill. You could use this rifle as a plinking rifle if you really want to. However, its obviously more suited in bench rested or off hand target shooting where you take your time and make every shot count.

Photo Of Friends Brno



Ammunition



The ammunition being using is CCI Blazer 40gr and Federal Champion 40gr. Both are not jacketed or hollow point. The reason why I picked these two is because someone told me these two are identical. Federal does own CCI so I thought maybe this is true but after today, there is no way they're the same. The Ruger favored the CCI and the CZ favored the Federal Champion. Both the CCI and Federal performed well. No failures in the 10/22 and the 455 show well with both. Both had the occasional underloaded and the occasional round that was a little hotter. The Federal was also noticeably louder than the CCI out of both rifles. I have a box of Federal Gold Medal and I'm interested to see what the CZ does with that. Maybe another thread later on.

Targets

25 Meters



25 meters went well for both rifles and ammo. The Ruger shows early signs of favoring CCI Blazer but the CZ is slightly unknown. Sadly, I did not make sure the Ruger was sighted in before and its sighted high.

50 Meters



The Ruger begins to open up a by a lot. The CZ also begins to show its favor for the Federal ammunition.

100 Meters CCI Blazer



The Ruger did really well. I was surprised. The 100 meter group with CCI is better than the 50 meter group other than the one missing shot. The CZ also shot really well. I know centerfire hunting rifles that struggle to do that well.

100 Meters Federal Champion



The CZ shoots well with the Federal at 100 but the Ruger obviously doesn't like it. I may of also marked the hits wrong. The high hit might be the CZ's while the lower one is the Rugers hit. Should of really used separate targets.

Closing Conclusion

The CZ is obviously the more accurate rifle. Its not even a fair test. The 10/22 does okay but like I said, its not really its purpose to be a target rifle though it could be used as one. The 10/22 is great fun with a fully loaded magazine and just a whole bunch of clay birds set up shooting from off hand while the bench rested CZ picks off the broken shards of the 10/22's clay birds. In my opinion, plinking is the funner way to shoot. Target shooting is okay. It can be fun but if you focus too much on getting tight groups it may drive you nuts one day when you're shooting and you can't get good groups and destroys your shooting day. The CZ could very well be used in a plinking role and I do it all the time but what it lacks is the semi auto action for quick follow up shots which is really what makes off hand plinking fun. Its definitely better for longer range bench rested plinking if used in such a role. I wouldn't sell either of these rifles and I would recommend them both or an equivalent bolt action and semi auto rimfire combo in anyone's collection.

Sources

w ww.ruger.com/products/1022Sporter/models.html

w ww.cabelas.ca/product/4882/ruger-1022-sporter-semi-auto-rifle

w ww.cz-usa.com/product/cz-455-fs-22-lr-5-rd-mag/

w ww.czub.cz/en/catalog/80-rimfire-rifles-cz/MS/CZ_455_FS.aspx

w ww.wanstallsonline.com/cz-455-fs-.22lr.html

w ww.rimfiretechnologies.com/ (for 10/22 aftermarket parts)
 
Thanks for the comparison. I have both rifles also, although I leave the 22mag barrel on my 455 while the 22LR barrel is for sale. I have the 1022 for 22LR. But I just recently bought a Stainless Savage Heavy Barrel with Thumbhole Laminated Stock and the Accutrigger. One 1022 is now up for sale.
The Savage shoots as well as the CZ but with a much nicer trigger. I guess you could say the 1022 is the ultimate fun plinker and the CZ is a more serious shooter. My pal has a saying, " inaccurate guns are boring". I'm starting to agree. Gophers, watch out!
 
I had a Savage Heavy Barrel, stainless steal, synthetic stock, .22 magnum with Accutrigger. I sold that rifle for extra cash while in post secondary school. I kick myself everyday for selling that rifle. I also like the fact they're made in Canada.

One thing I was wondering, do they sell .22 magnum or .17HMR barrels with iron sights on them?

Nevermind I just found them on an American site. Does anyone in Canada sell these barrel sets?
 
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I just recently bought a Stainless Savage Heavy Barrel with Thumbhole Laminated Stock and the Accutrigger. One 1022 is now up for sale. The Savage shoots as well as the CZ but with a much nicer trigger.

My Savage outshoots my CZ's and my 10/22, go figure. It's also the least pretty and feels the most cheaply made (which it is), especially the safety, magwell and magazines. The 10/22 is the only one of the group that can fall a small tree in an acceptable amount of time ;)
 
If you did a trigger job on the 10/22 and dropped in an aftermarket barrel with a good chamber... bringing the cost to $650 matching the cost of the CZ, it would be a more interesting comparison. Personally, I like both platforms... with my CZ's I add nothing but mounts and scopes... with my 10/22's I can't resist modding them... that's part of the fun.
 
From my little research this afternoon on the CZ 455 barrel swapping, It seems to me CZ has turned the 455 into a lego gun. Want .22 magnum? buy the barrel kit. Bored of your 455 FS and want to turn it into a 455 American in .17hmr? Buy a .17hmr American barrel and American stock. It still all works out cheaper than buying a whole new rifle plus the added advantage of freed up storage space in your safe for more different guns rather than 3 455's.
 
Thanks for the comparison. I have CZ 455 and am looking into getting a 10/22. This post just provides valuable information for what I should expect out of the 10/22. I should also try the Federal Champion on my CZ. So far I have the best luck in regards of accuracy from CCI Blazer. Got some Eley but didn't have chance to shoot it yet.
 
If you did a trigger job on the 10/22 and dropped in an aftermarket barrel with a good chamber... bringing the cost to $650 matching the cost of the CZ, it would be a more interesting comparison. Personally, I like both platforms... with my CZ's I add nothing but mounts and scopes... with my 10/22's I can't resist modding them... that's part of the fun.

I mentioned in the comparison that there is a large aftermarket pool of parts for the 10/22. I even left a link in sources to a aftermarket parts site for the 10/22.
 
Thanks for the comparison. I have CZ 455 and am looking into getting a 10/22. This post just provides valuable information for what I should expect out of the 10/22. I should also try the Federal Champion on my CZ. So far I have the best luck in regards of accuracy from CCI Blazer. Got some Eley but didn't have chance to shoot it yet.

I sighted in my 455 with Winchester 555 .38gr hallow points and then with CCI Blazer and for some reason my 455 loves that 555 which is great because its cheap. Thanks for the comment and good luck on your search for a 10/22.
 
If you did a trigger job on the 10/22 and dropped in an aftermarket barrel with a good chamber... bringing the cost to $650 matching the cost of the CZ, it would be a more interesting comparison.

I agree. Or order a full custom setup and import it from the US :)
 
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I put my razor hd on my 455 for ground hogs, it out shoots most or my center fires at 100M.

Yep. Sometimes you have to over scope it to see what’s possible. Fortunately though, this is a permanent setup :)
 
OP, just a little clarification on the ammo FYI:

CCI Blazer and Fed Champion are two different rounds, even though the same company owns both manufacturers. The confusion arises because Federal actually makes some of the ammo packaged as CCI Blazer. You can tell the difference by closely examining the packaging. "Real" CCI has:

1. A flap opening on the brick (not a tear strip.)
2. The ammo tray in the box is a single flat piece of transparent plastic (not a white tray with legs.)
3. The bullet is very dark gray (not a lighter silvery gray.)

There are no other disinguishing marks. The graphics and labels are the same. The real CCI is a very good budget round. The Federal version is OK, but will often not cycle well in semi autos. I don't know which flavour they put in the bulk packs.

There's something else to look out for in ammo labeled as Federal. Federal Gold Medal 711b is an excellent SV round. Federal Champion 714 is technically the same ammo (but usually about half the price.) If you get a good lot of 714 it's a bargain, just as good as 711b. Trouble is, you can't tell the good lots from the poor until you buy it. A poor lot of 714 is accurate, and works well in bolt guns, but seems underpowered and usually won't cycle a semi reliably. I suspect the difference in 714 performance has to do with their batch testing. The lots that pass the test probably get packaged as 711b and the others are sold as 714. Since they just test random samples, sometimes the 714 is the same as the 711b and sometimes it's not.

You didn't mention whether the Fed Champion you were using was HV or SV. If it was the HV load 510 (a very common one), that is definitely not the same round as CCI Blazer.
 
I just bought a CZ 455 standard on Friday. Took it out today and put 50 rnds of Rem Golden Bullet thru it. I was very pleased with the accuracy "out-of-the-box" with no scope. I'll have to go on a better day when there's not fog delaying the shoot but I don't think I'll have to make any adjustments for now. I find the bolt a bit rough but I'll get used to it.
 
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