Little rascal or Half pint?

BCrecce

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Looking at buying my kids a 22 so far its a toss up between the mossberg half pint and the savage little rascal.
Both have their pros and cons, just wondering if anyone has personal experience with either as no one I know has one to try.
 
I have a rascal, a t/c hotshot and a cz scout. (All youth 22's)

The rascal is very nice, light and thin around the wrist. Very well made for the price.

I have never seen the mossberg you speak of but judging by other mossberg rifles, I would go savage.
 
On one hand, the Mossberg is an unknown: I found one review of the mossberg (rimfire central). It came across as poor next to the cz scout. It appears to be quite cheaply made and was hard to use (rough bolt, mag seating issues). The half pint was introduced in 2008 and it hasn't exactly been a hit for Mossberg. I was surprised to hear they made a kids rifle.

On the other hand, the rascal gets rave reviews, coming after the successful Savage Cub.
IMO, the peep sight is better than the open sights of the HP, the accutrigger which works very well. It cocks on opening, so it's easy to work the action. Mine is more accurate than the red dot sight I have on it.
The only advantage of the HP is for mounting optics and reloading with the magazine, as loading a single shot under a scope is a pain.

To get around this, I mounted a Bushnell TRS-25 on the front scope base, but it was still in the way when loading. Now the TRS-25 is mounted on a 35mm long quad rail barrel mount (ebay) just in front of the stock. This works even better. As it is now, it would be good for gophers up to 50 yards with the red dot. That's mainly due to the size of the dot w.r.t. the target. The next step is a extended eye relief scope and 2 of the quad rail barrel mounts. With the red dot, I was getting 2" 5 shot groups at 65 yards using winchester 555. At 20 yards it was more of a ragged hole.

Bottom line, get the rascal.
 
I don't know about the other one, but I'm happy with the Rascal.

My boys have them, also with the TR-25 reddots on the front mount. Nice little rifles for kids.
 
we have a red rascal for my son and a pink cricket for my daughter. rascal is lighter and the stock is a lot narrower from the forearm to the butt. now I'm comparing a synthetic to a laminate stock in terms of weight. the rascal has a little plastic feed ramp that makes it easier to load where the cricket you have to actually put the round in the chamber. the cricket you have to pull back the bolt like on older cooey's to fire and the rascal has a very stiff safety that I have to click off for my son, he can't push it forward it's so stiff (I kind of like that actually). both are great little guns for kids.

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My son tried an old cooey and could barely hold it up, once he pinched his hand with the cocker he was a wee timid. The rascal is looking like a winner, thanks for all the input
 
one thing I forgot to mention is the trigger is more forward on the rascal as compared to the cricket, it's farther ahead from the pistol grip my son has a hard time reaching it. wish I had experience with the Mossberg for you.
 
I bought my son a Badger and a Rascal. For a while he could not open the catch on the Badger to load it. Six months later, his hands are strong enough to open the rifle by himself. I had to really watch him with the Badger as muzzle control could be a problem as he is trying to open it. I bought a Rascal for him in the spring and he loves it. Easy to load, accurate and the rifle 'fits' him perfectly. Its costing me a small fortune in .22 but worth every penny.
 
I bought my son a Badger and a Rascal. For a while he could not open the catch on the Badger to load it. Six months later, his hands are strong enough to open the rifle by himself. I had to really watch him with the Badger as muzzle control could be a problem as he is trying to open it. I bought a Rascal for him in the spring and he loves it. Easy to load, accurate and the rifle 'fits' him perfectly. Its costing me a small fortune in .22 but worth every penny.

I may pick up a badger just for me but my son loves the bolt action and levers and more the traditional style stocks. Ive been preparing for the rifle by stocking up on 22lr everytime im out, snatching up any good ammo I see.
 
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