Dear god... My First Experience w/ a 10/22

BananaKlipz

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Couple weeks ago I had a brain wave to sell my beloved Remington 597 VTR .22LR. Why, I dont know...it was a tack driver and functioned flawlessly, shot everything I fed it, functioned whitout a hiccup. My only problem is that I was never able to completely tear it down, and clean the bolt, chamber, guide rods etc. Very minimal info online with break down of 597 VTRs, and most of my cleaning, which served me fine was done with CLP sprayed into the breach through the ejection port and then a couple of q-tips to clean/ wipe what I could visibly see and acess ie. the bolt face, firing pin, some of the guide rods, and then up through the mag well, boresnake through the barrel and that was it. This never hindered the performance of the firearm, like i said...it was a work horse, but I was never fully satisfied when I cleaned it after a range session and threw it in the safe. If I understand correctly I have to completely remove the barrel for a tear down, as well as servicing the trigger group is opening a can of worms in terms of dissasembly complexity?

With this new found chunk of cash i decided to go ahead and pull the trigger (hahaha) on a Ruger 10/22 and picked up a new (To me) 10/22 in a tan archangel .556 stock. Here we go...another tacticooled rimfire in a body kit full of screws and complexity and fitment issues, but this time it was a new rifle to learn, and conquer :)

WELL, with 15 minutes spent on youtube, with a archangel .556 10/22 install vid, and a ruger 10/22 dis sasembly video, and another 10/22 trigger group dis assembly video, it was time to dive in. I just reversed the process of the archangel assembly video to tear it down. Only two sized allen keys required and 9 screws. TADA... there was a mint 9.5 out of 10 conditioned 10/22 in terms of finish under that fancy kit...+1 for me.

Now with a tear down video on barreled receiver, bolt removal, spring, charging handle etc. I was able to pull the bolt out and clean it, aswell as the chamber...glad i did as it was as the bolt and chamber was shipped to me in very dirty condition. Reassembly was no problem, just takes a little practice to learn to hold the spring and charging handel back, while trying to line the bolt up to index and drop into place.

Next was the trigger group, dissasembly was no problem, while I had it pulled I seen a video on youtube on a 10/22 auto bolt release DIY mod. I was hesitant to proceed, but i had made it this far with relative ease so I decided to tackle it as i had it apart already. It took me two shots at filing and reinstalling the bolt lock/release plate to get it to work, i had to go back to take some more meat off of it, but it worked perfectly after the second try. Reassembly was a little more difficult to get things lined up with the psh pins, and it took me a minute to undestand how the spring worked, as the bottom arm of it sits in the index on the bolt lock/release plate and the top of the spring arm has to be fit under the push pin. Put it all back together...success.

Whats the point of this big poorly written and constructed rant, BIG SH!T, you could do what i did with your eyes closed.

Im simply happy as hell with my first 10/22, Very simple design and disasembly, archangel kit is well thought out, three pieces that fit together, and they fit together well. With some youtube education, i was able to completely strip a archangel kit, then break the gun down to completely clean it, as well as disassemble the trigger group, and perform a DIY auto bolt release mod...then put it all back together, with success. 10/22 FTW! Now i just got to find out what it likes to feed and shoot well...any tips?

P.S. YES! I was a newb, and I am still learning everyday and with every login here on CGN.
YES! my CGN username is "Bananaklipz", not "HighCapacityExtendedMagazinez".
 
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Tips? Dont shoot yourself in the foot
Just loader up and shoot it mine eats everything after the bolt chamfer
 
Tips? Dont shoot yourself in the foot
Just loader up and shoot it mine eats everything after the bolt chamfer

Thanks dude! Bolt chamfer? not going to ask you to explain this procedure as it might be lengthy or detailed, is there a write up or video about it you could point me in the direction of?

Randy
 
From this

Too this

To this



Its just grinding a bevel on the back of the bolt to gain a mechanical advantage cocking the hammer easy to do
 
I'm very happy for you!!! I'm also very happy you didn't get suckered into buying a SR-22 that has been upgraded!
Now you know why I say the 10/22 is the Honda Civic of rimfires!
I strongly recommend you swap out the bolt buffer for a good aftermarket one. I really quites to rifle down!
The only other option I would suggest are you have some good range time is a barrel swap.
I didn't even shoot my stock barrel when I bought my 10/22. I ordered a tactical solutions barrel at the same time.
That barrel is 16" and is 15oz so under a pound!
Made a difference IMO on accuracy and gun balance.
I then bought a Axiom stock. It's 1.2lbs.
So now my 16" CH22 AR charging 22lr gun with a trs-25 weights 3.75lbs loaded.
I just can't justify a 7+lbs rimfire, and if young kids are shooting it freehand, forget it!
If you're training for your real AR-15, that's totally different!
Hope you enjoy you new Honda Civic!
 
I'm very happy for you!!! I'm also very happy you didn't get suckered into buying a SR-22 that has been upgraded!
Now you know why I say the 10/22 is the Honda Civic of rimfires!
I strongly recommend you swap out the bolt buffer for a good aftermarket one. I really quites to rifle down!
The only other option I would suggest are you have some good range time is a barrel swap.
I didn't even shoot my stock barrel when I bought my 10/22. I ordered a tactical solutions barrel at the same time.
That barrel is 16" and is 15oz so under a pound!
Made a difference IMO on accuracy and gun balance.
I then bought a Axiom stock. It's 1.2lbs.
So now my 16" CH22 AR charging 22lr gun with a trs-25 weights 3.75lbs loaded.
I just can't justify a 7+lbs rimfire, and if young kids are shooting it freehand, forget it!
If you're training for your real AR-15, that's totally different!
Hope you enjoy you new Honda Civic!
Thanks! It's already about 1/2 the weight of my previous 597VTR setup as the VTR was all metal reciever, w/ a heavy barrel. I agree that kind of weight is not necessary on a rimfire, but to each their own. As for a .920 barrel, i would like to upgrade to, i could for see it in the future, but i dont want to spend 250-400 bucks on one. I know you get what you pay for but 150-199 would be my price point...are there any in that price bracket?

Randy
 
Thanks! It's already about 1/2 the weight of my previous 597VTR setup as the VTR was all metal reciever, w/ a heavy barrel. I agree that kind of weight is not necessary on a rimfire, but to each their own. As for a .920 barrel, i would like to upgrade to, i could for see it in the future, but i dont want to spend 250-400 bucks on one. I know you get what you pay for but 150-199 would be my price point...are there any in that price bracket?

Randy

Dlask is right in that price range their heavy but really nice i have a 10" on my go to ruger right now.
 
It would depend on your overall length in your 556 stock I think youll end up restricted but I dont own the stock to give a definate answer.
Gotcha, it still is measured by over all length of firearm. I thought this fell in one of those loop hole clause's that if you purchase a barrel that was manufactured to a certain length at the factory and unaltered, its legal to install on a firearm, without a reclassification? Thanks... im still learning
 
Gotcha, it still is measured by over all length of firearm. I thought this fell in one of those loop hole clause's that if you purchase a barrel that was manufactured to a certain length at the factory and unaltered, its legal to install on a firearm, without a reclassification? Thanks... im still learning

Your on the right track for barrel length but your oal is the factor in restricted or non restricted If you cut a barrel below 18" its a prohibited.
 
I'm not saying Dlask isn't great. Joe was great to me with my SU-16. His 8" 10/22 barrel was great, but darn it's loud and very very heavy! My friend had one of his long Bull barrels and it weighted more than a bat and could be used to club someone to death. If you are ONLY bench rest shooting, great, however if you're doing any offhand shooting, please, please look at the weight first!
If that's an issue for you.
Hope you have fun!
 
Yes, .920 barrels are obviously going to weigh more than a lighter profiled barrel, but the 8" really isn't that heavy, yes it's louder, but it's still a 22lr. Even a .920" barrel at 18-20" long is very shootable offhand.

I would suggest Dlask, the pricepoint is awesome and they shoot very very well. I'd probably go with the SR-22 profile 12.5" barrel, that would be an awesome compromise I would think.
 
Yes, .920 barrels are obviously going to weigh more than a lighter profiled barrel, but the 8" really isn't that heavy, yes it's louder, but it's still a 22lr. Even a .920" barrel at 18-20" long is very shootable offhand.

I would suggest Dlask, the pricepoint is awesome and they shoot very very well. I'd probably go with the SR-22 profile 12.5" barrel, that would be an awesome compromise I would think.
sounds good guys, thanks for the input so far...i think a 12.5" dlask tickles my fancy. Just gotta measure it out and see if i meet the required OAL measurement to stay non-restricted.
 
Here is some idea of the 8.5" Dlask BBL on 10/22(SR25). I think this is the minimum length you can go to stay in non restricted.
Mine is 670mm OAL without the comp.


:p
 
looks sick! i think i will have to get the 12.5" barrel eventually beacuse i have a collapsable MOE style stock (Factory archangel 556 one), and with it fully collapsed it has a pretty small OAL.
 
I don't have scale but I can tell it weight very light. Pretty sure it is weight less than 7lb.
Will update it if I can find a scale.
 
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