.22 cal. penetration results - aluminum siding

It would definitely penetrate that siding.

I tested my ruger 10/22 (semi-auto) on wood, and it went through three hardwood 2x4s.
 
They go through the little propane bottles for campstoves without too much trouble.

On the other hand, they seem to have trouble punching through barb-wire hangers on top of chain link fences (so I am told, I wouldn't shoot at property).
 
We had a shot up aluminum frying pan that was hung from a tree. 22's would consistently zip right through it, so it didn't make a very good gong. Unless your siding is thicker than a frying pan........

As mentioned above, the angle will have a lot to do with penetration.
 
From 25m a 22lr will go through an old pick up truck door, in the windshield and out the back window, through the roof, through the hood, through the wings into the engine compartment, etc.... Don't ask how I know ;) You would be amazed and what a 22lr will go through.
 
Since aluminum siding is fairly soft, whatever hit it would not bounce very far. Maybe you should go and look around the ground under the dent. It did not penetrate so the perp should be within a few feet of the incident.
 
From 25m a 22lr will go through an old pick up truck door, in the windshield and out the back window, through the roof, through the hood, through the wings into the engine compartment, etc.... Don't ask how I know ;) You would be amazed and what a 22lr will go through.

Oh, I just gotta ask....;)
 
22 penetration

I shot a steel barrel a bunch of times and the .22 just blasted holes like no tomorrow.
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Years ago, when steel 45 gallon drums were really made of heavier metal, when I wanted a new burning barrel, I would give the kids a box of .22 LR and let them go at it. MOST of the rounds would penetrate both sides, depending upon the angle of impact.

The garbage burned real good after that treatment. It lets the air in, and produces a kind of "blast furnace" effect.

There was also an internet site that dealed in using the .22 LR as a substitute rifle for Police Tactical training. The question was about penetration, so they took a frozen Turkey, wrapped it in a shirt and raincoat, put duct tape on it, and shot at it from 250 yards away. The turkey had thawed out a bit ( done in California ), but several rounds went clean through it.

Also, there are references to using .22s as sniping rifles in Russia and Israel. The Russians used a purpose built one, but the Israelis seem to be using silenced Ruger 10-22s.
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.22LR goes through a SB Chevy oil pan at 100m so it would definately go through aluminum siding.

Must have been a BB or a SWC or RN pellet. Those pointy pellets will go through aluminum siding. (mind you not very deep into the wood behind it).
 
There was also an internet site that dealed in using the .22 LR as a substitute rifle for Police Tactical training. The question was about penetration, so they took a frozen Turkey, wrapped it in a shirt and raincoat, put duct tape on it, and shot at it from 250 yards away. The turkey had thawed out a bit ( done in California ), but several rounds went clean through it.
I posted a thread on the lethality of a .22 and that is the article.
 
I am not in a position at the moment to test this myself so I am wondering if anyone out there has had any experience with a 22 LR or a 22 Short hitting heavy guage aluminum siding (not galvanized steel)? Distance would be from approximately 75 feet. Will the round penetrate the siding? I am trying to determine if a building was actually hit with a 22 cal. round. Thanks for your help.

Food for thought, if the "vandals" could've shooting sub-sonic rounds they wouldn't be able to penetrate the siding at 75 feet but you should be able to find some of the bullets near the points of impact.....
 
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Sub-sonics are still pretty powerful, maybe you mean CBs?

So far the only thing my .22 wouldn't go through is a piece of wood my friend said was from a railroad track. I want to shoot that piece of wood with my 303 and never speak of it again.
 
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