There was nothing wrong with the 220 swift either. Darn these new fangled upstart cartridges.Nothing wrong with the .22-250; I could put the word Creedmoor on a wad of dog s*** and the fan boys would buy it. LOL
The 22-250 was originally designed to shoot 55gr varmint bullets. Those would be less than idea for long range plinking.I do NOT have any opportunity to shoot coyotes so my inly potential interest would be in long range plinking.
Anyone have a compelling argument to make??
Not sure why you would spec a fast twist rate for 55gr bullets?An 8 twist 22-250 loaded with a 55 grain Barnes TTSX would make one hell of a VI blacktail rig.
Sure there was, the 220 Swift burned barrels VERY quickly.There was nothing wrong with the 220 swift either. Darn these new fangled upstart cartridges.
There are better options in the 6mm bore.Although if im buying a new barrel altogether, im thinking I would go 6 cdm instead.
So right you are!There was nothing wrong with the 220 swift either. Darn these new fangled upstart cartridges.
The most of these modern cartridges are designed to work in AR actions first, and to perform second. This concept first came to light in the 6.5 creed; it works as well as the .260 Remington, but falls a bit short against modern 6.5 x 55 SE rifles and higher pressure loadings. So what is the advantage to Canadians? It fits in a short action rifle, it is popular, so lots of bullets available for it and the rest of us with .264 bores, there is a lot of factory loadings available. Disadvantages are that there is much less choice in factory ammo for the rest of us with .264.The 22-250 was originally designed to shoot 55gr varmint bullets. Those would be less than idea for long range plinking.
Everything will hinge on the twist rate of the barrel you are contemplating. Long range bullets need a fast twist rate.
If you are truly looking for a long range rifle in a 223 sized bore, the Creedmor would be a better choice as that case was designed for accuracy. The 22-250 is a little long in the tooth these days.
Not sure why you would spec a fast twist rate for 55gr bullets?
Sure there was, the 220 Swift burned barrels VERY quickly.
Very impressive that's about 1/4 MOA. No wind that day?I have a 1:9 McGowan barrel on a cz 550 action.
It's amazing for longer distances.
Got my first 1.5" 5shot 400m group this year w 70gr Berger VLDs
I'd go for it if finances allow. Very satisfying



























