I like your Annie 22 hornet your one lucky guy, please let us know how it shoots,
The target in the picture has a five shot .465" group on it.I am going to try Remington 6-1/2 primers,and some small pistol primers though,just to see the results.
I like your Annie 22 hornet your one lucky guy, please let us know how it shoots,
Hornets have to be one of the most finicky cartridges to load for accuracy; perhaps thats their charm. Last week I loaded 10 grs of 2400 with a small pistol primer behind a Hornady 45 gr bullet and it blew the primer out of the case and appears have to have enlarged the primer pocket. Go figure, it is supposed to be a factory equivalent load, and this was in new Winchester brass. Despite that I got minute of fox accuracy with 10 grs of 4227 and 9.5 grs of H-110 using the Hornady 45 gr .224" Hornet bullet. I tried Sierras, and expected them to be better due to their shorter ogive but the results were worse than dismal out of this old Savage 340. I saw a BSA Martini in .22 Hornet for sale in the Access, now that's tempting as are Clay's Mannlicher stocked CZz.!
I wonder if you are using .224" diameter bullets. That is what I have been using. The 45 grain Speer won't stablaize, nor would the 36 grain Barnes hollow point Varmit Grenade. They were longer than standard 45 grain. 13 grains of LilGun with a 40 grain bullet is shown as maximum on the Hodgdon site, but with only a pressure of 28,400 CUP. When using pistol primers, some of them leaked pressure. The rifle primers look like a whale of a lot more pressure than what is shown.
I can't imagine .001" in diameter size having a noticeable difference in pressure, but maybe it has.
Have you, or anyone else, tried both diameters?
Boomer: Did you confirm the length of the brass? I bought 2 bags of Win Brass and I had 3 spare cases (203 cases) - 1 of them was really long. So long that when I fired it the primer pocket stretched and the case had to be turfed. I learned my lesson, now I trim all my new brass...
My SAKO had a .223 barrel and that ##### was as inconsistent as a woman. It was free floated and would shoot 1/2" one day and all over the paper the next.Finally sold it out of frustration...........................Harold
My understanding is that there haven't been any .223 Hornet barrels made since WW-2, so I haven't tried them.
Harold,
Same here. Myself and River Rat on board here each bought brand new Model 78 SAKOs back in the early 80s. They were nothing but frustrating to try to keep shooting accurately.
After three years of trying, I finally traded mine for an extra large Yukon lynx hide.........which a few years later was worth the trade.
Ted



























