I shoot cz457 MTR. Same chamber, as far as I know.Anyone using the Norma TAC 22 in these match chamber rifles, if so any loading issues? Have you found any ammo that doesn't work well in the rifles, if so what brand or brands? Thanks.
So since CZ barrels all comply with the mandatory CIP standards, all their chambers are "match grade" as defined by the voluntary US SAMMI "match" standards. When I put a brand new take off 457 Varmint barrel on my 455 action in an oryx I had trouble closing the bolt on TAC22 and CCI STD. I ended up shimming the barrel out 0.0015 (now it closes just slightly harder with ammo that if dry cycling), that is about perfect.Anyone using the Norma TAC 22 in these match chamber rifles, if so any loading issues? Have you found any ammo that doesn't work well in the rifles, if so what brand or brands? Thanks.
Doesn't look good when basic comprehension seems to fail a critic.Doesn't look good to contradict yourself by saying rifle barrels don't have a preference, and then directly follow with an example from an ammo manufacturer of why rifle barrels can have a preference.![]()
I'm not the one with the comprehension problem. Take five lots of Eley Tenex and shoot 100 rounds of each through a given rifle with a match chamber. They're not all going to shoot as well as the next, despite your foolhardy assertions. You contradict yourself, and you contradict what pretty much every competitive shooter has seen with their own rifles over the years. Every gun has its own preferred appetite. This is common knowledge. Being confident in yourself doesn't make you correct. There's more than enough evidence in the wild to show your current supposition is baseless.Doesn't look good when basic comprehension seems to fail a critic.
Rifles don't have a preference for a particular brand or variety of ammo. They will shoot good, consistent ammo well, regardless of make, provided they are suitable for use in the particular rifle. Not all .22LR ammo is equally suitable.
CCI SV is intended for use in SAAMI chambers, not CIP or match chambers. CCI SV can be hard to chamber in CIP or similar chambers because of it's bullet design. For this reason it's disqualified from being a good ammo for use in rifles with CZ "match" chambers.
It follows that CCI SV bullet design (made to fit SAAMI chambers) aside, if the CCI SV on hand was good and consistent, it would shoot well. Of course, CCI SV is not a match or even entry level target or match ammo. It's standard velocity ammo but nothing special. Like many .22LR ammos performance will vary so any preference will be for consecutive good, consistent rounds.
Unfortunately, you remain uncomprehending. You apparently don't understand the reason that those five lots of Tenex you use as an example may not shoot equally well in a given rifle.I'm not the one with the comprehension problem. Take five lots of Eley Tenex and shoot 100 rounds of each through a given rifle with a match chamber. They're not all going to shoot as well as the next, despite your foolhardy assertions. You contradict yourself, and you contradict what pretty much every competitive shooter has seen with their own rifles over the years. Every gun has its own preferred appetite. This is common knowledge. Being confident in yourself doesn't make you correct. There's more than enough evidence in the wild to show your current supposition is baseless.
There's no .22LR ammo made in Finland. Lapua is made in Germany and has been for decades. SK is made at the same place as Lapua .22LR ammo. RWS .22LR ammo is also made in Germany. Eley is produced in the U.K. No .22LR match ammo is made in the US.At first guess I’m trying Finnish ammo in a Finnish rifle, German ammo in a German rifle, American ammo in an American rifle, and it’s surprising how often the choice doesn’t change after trying the other combinations.
Interesting. I had thought that Lapua/SK was further north but it makes sense that 22LR production might eventually be consolidated. Either way, I’m using those happily in Tikka & Sako rifles, RWS in my Anschutz, and keep some bulk CCI with my 10/22 plinking mags.There's no .22LR ammo made in Finland. Lapua is made in Germany and has been for decades. SK is made at the same place as Lapua .22LR ammo. RWS .22LR ammo is also made in Germany. Eley is produced in the U.K. No .22LR match ammo is made in the US.
I'm not the one that doesn't understand things. That would be you. As usual. I understand better than you how these things work, as evidenced by how many times I've tried to teach you various things due to how you misunderstood them. In this instance, it is rather strange and humourous how you fail to connect the dots between single-ammo manufacturing tolerances playing out how they do, and multiple-manufacturer differences not also playing out in the same manner, but to an even larger degree due to just how much those same factors will differ when going from single-model tolerances to multiple-manufacturer tolerances/differences. As happens way too often, you think you're right, even when you yourself are pointing things out that contradict other portions of your supposition/argument.Unfortunately, you remain uncomprehending. You apparently don't understand the reason that those five lots of Tenex you use as an example may not shoot equally well in a given rifle.
Not all lots of the same make are equally consistent. To put it another way, even though they are all Tenex the five different lots may be different from one another. The name on the ammo box, whether it's Tenex or Midas + or X-Act, is never a guarantee that it is as consistent as every other lot of the same ammo. In short, some lots are better than others.
Consistency includes not only MV variation but also casings, priming, bullet shape and weight and diameter as well as bullet seating and casing to bullet crimping among others. Put simply not all lots are equal and that's why they don't perform equally.
Edit: Shorty if you wish to discuss this further, create another thread. There's no need to further divert from this one.
more testingjust tried it last week. was happy with the result... for the price.
SK Match is still better.
Tenex still the best.
Shoot order | Center to centre | Manufacture | Brand | Muzzle vel | Bullet weight | |
1 | 0.647 | Winchester | 555 | 1280 | 36 | |
2 | 0.693 | Federal | American Eagle | 1260 | 38 | |
3 | 0.83 | Eley | Biathalon | 1060 | 40 | |
4 | 0.525 | Eley | Sport | 1000 | 40 | |
5 | 0.597 | Federal | Lightning | 1240 | 40 | |
6 | 0.921 | CCI | Blazer | 1245 | 40 | |
7 | 1.14 | Remington | Game loads | 1280 | 36 | |
8 | 0.414 | Winchester | Wildcat | 1255 | 40 | |
9 | 0.869 | Aguila | Subsonic | 1024 | 38 | |
10 | 0.93 | CCI | Standard Velocity | 1070 | 40 | |
11 | 0.704 | SK | High Veloicy | 1263 | 40 | |
12 | 0.582 | Winchester | Power Point | 1320 | 42 | |
13 | 0.481 | Norma | Tac | 1083 | 40 | |
14 | 0.48 | Federal | Automatch | 1200 | 40 | |
15 | 0.787 | Winchester | Xpert HV | 1280 | 36 |
mine dont like norma tac 22. cheap ammo it likes the s&b canadian match. mid-tier, it likes the sk rifle match.Anyone using the Norma TAC 22 in these match chamber rifles, if so any loading issues? Have you found any ammo that doesn't work well in the rifles, if so what brand or brands? Thanks.