Absolutely true, but he's building his own rifle. He can get whatever he wants in terms of twist rate, weights, etc. Why build something you can buy off the shelf?Far more fast twist 223s available than fast twist 22-250s though.
Absolutely true, but he's building his own rifle. He can get whatever he wants in terms of twist rate, weights, etc. Why build something you can buy off the shelf?Far more fast twist 223s available than fast twist 22-250s though.
I'd suggest comparing apples to apples rather than oranges. The same fast twist rate on a .22-250 with heavier bullets will maintain its position as superior to the .223 with the same bullets and rates of spin.
Or did you really mean what you actually wrote, i.e. that you want a slow twist rate for a heavy bullet? If you did, then, once again...sorry, but no.
With a budget of $1000 hes not buying a new barrel, so hes stuck with whatever factory barrel/twist options he can find. And while there are a few faster-twist 22-250s out there (American Predator is 1:10, I think tikka did some fast twist 22-250s too?) they're the exception rather than the rule.Absolutely true, but he's building his own rifle. He can get whatever he wants in terms of twist rate, weights, etc. Why build something you can buy off the shelf?
Yeah, I forgot about that budget...and I even have an American Predator in .22-250 that's one of my coyote favourites. If the OP bolts one into a chassis, he can use .308 AICS mags handily.With a budget of $1000 hes not buying a new barrel, so hes stuck with whatever factory barrel/twist options he can find. And while there are a few faster-twist 22-250s out there (American Predator is 1:10, I think tikka did some fast twist 22-250s too?) they're the exception rather than the rule.
did that twice, two tikka varmint stainless .204's (slow learner, but finally got it), 1" at 250 with federal 39 Sierra blitzking factory (sadly discontinued), but the facking rifles are way too heavy when actually calling and trying to move the gun on them, build away, a 6 arc if trying to do long range game, skip the heavy .22 stuff, 6 arc out of the box, a howa would be the ticket, nothing needed, not even reloading, get the lightweight ones not heavy barrel!With $1000 to spend I’d say get a tikka varmint rifle in 223, 22-250 or 204 ruger
You use a rossi 92 for coyotes ??Always been curious why it’s always the same 3 calibers of bolt gun. I use a Rossi R92 in 357 mag currently and it’s great. Cost me $1000
I do, why? Is that strange? Genuine question, maybe from lack of experience or maybe its location, I’m in Ontario and none of my shots are any farther than 100, maybe 150 yards on an off chance.You use a rossi 92 for coyotes ??
Ah. That would do it.I do, why? Is that strange? Genuine question, maybe from lack of experience or maybe its location, I’m in Ontario and none of my shots are any farther than 100, maybe 150 yards on an off chance.
But why would someone build a custom chassis/action/barrel for varmint control? I find my gun cheap, accurate, reliable, nice and short and easy in and out of the truck.
That actually makes way more sense now (even the argument for 22-250 over 223 from an outsider perspective) sorry to hijack I just see this topic argued every other week so I thought I might ask. Seems location has the biggest implication on my question, around my farm the Coyotes are mangy looking things, barely a pelt on them worth using, for a while there distemper was showing up in the coons and we were burning the trash pandas and coyotes alike after, hell I was using a 45-70 just out of proficiency/availability sake at the time.. But for harvest 20 cal makes a lot of sense, especially in that environment and as mentioned above, it’s not like you’re needing to make quick follow up shots. Thanks for the insight, sometimes I forget how big the nation is.Ah. That would do it.
In the prairies shots past 100 are very common and fast flat shooting rifles are the name of the game for that situation. The reason for the speedy little guys is that under 400 yards depending on loads, bullets, wind etc there is very little holdover which is beneficial on small flighty targets like coyotes. No need to range and dial just hold on hair and pull the pin.
The smaller bullets are also ideal for those that are saving hides. The little bullets do lots of damage inside and not a lot of damage outside. Nowadays with fur prices down people are caring less and less but personally I take great pride in killing a coyote with next to zero fur damage.
As for building the perfect rifle. If you’re going out multiple days in the winter and shooting a fair amount wouldn't you want to have a comfortable accurate rifle to do it with?
You're not snagging a T3X Varmint off the EE for that money unless the seller is drunk.With $1000 to spend I’d say get a tikka varmint rifle in 223, 22-250 or 204 ruger