Ruger 10/22s Love 'em? Hate 'em? Tell me.

Love to hate the ones I have owned. :D

Still have one, sold my other one just a while back... May pick up another receiver and build another..

They are like Lego... :D

And lots of cheap fun :)
 
I love rimfire rifles, love em! I've shot a fair number over the years, beginning as a child on the farm. I've only had one 10/22 and I didn't keep it for long; a few months and about 2500 rounds. The good: it was reliable. The bad: just about everything else.
 
i have lots of rim fire rifles .one is a 10/22 i wouldnt be wwithout one now ,there are better rifles but for accessories an just plain plinking you cant beat a ruger10/22 and if its going to be the only one you own it will fill wat ever role you want it to play .
 
I find it odd the difference in price for a new 10/22 between the birch stock and the walnut. For all practical purposes, there's no real difference between the two types of wood, but if you get the walnut, it has a checkered hand grip and foregrip, and it's about $75 more. WTF?
 
10/22s are rubbish. Accuracy is a dice roll at best for them in the last few years. If you have to get a new barrel and trigger just to make them shoot straight, it isn't a good rifle.

Marlins, even ones under Remington, are tack-drivers out of the box and cost quite a bit less.

Which Marlin do you like best, then? I was looking at a Model 795 and a Model 60SN at Bass Pro Shop and they both felt like they were cheaply manufactured crap (sorry, don't mean to insult your Marlins).
 
lol

Ok for kicks...(not trolling really...there has to be at LEAST one of us) I'll offer up. May the mightiest keyboard prevail kinda thing...

Like OP, I bought my first .22 twentyfive+ years ago. I currently am "down" to about a dozen .22's. None of mine are 10/22's. I've owned and, handled a few but, really don't care for them. There's a very good reason Marlin has outsold them for decades but, still don't show up in the EE.

Other than the ability to add parts n' bits, not too much there... If you want a "new" semi .22 there are better options, unless you wanna add-on.

Ah ha, Camster! I knew I could suck you into this thread! LOL You got me wondering about the 10/22 and its mythical following with that comment you made in email the other day. :D
 
Why do you hate the trigger?

I hated my 10/22 trigger because it was gritty feeling and the pull was insanely heavy. It is on my new "cheaply made" 795 too mind you. :)

As for the Marlin comments, can't really disagree with the 795 looking more like a toy than serious firearm, but Ruger 10/22s are hardly heirloom-quality guns either. My 795 will out-shoot any stock 10/22 I've had my hands on, but others may have had other experiences. I'd rather have a wood-stocked 795, but I can't foresee a day when I'd choose a 10/22 (at twice the price of a 795) over the Marlin. The "Lego factor" of the 10/22s also holds zero appeal, but I understand how it might to some.
 
I owned a couple of them early in production.
Nothing about them really stood out in my mind.
I own 20 or so 22 rimfires. None are 10-22s.
Only semi I own is an old, very reliable Mossberg 151M.
Regards, Eagleye.

I've got a Mossberg 151M as well, Eagleye. It's a tack driver even just using iron sights. The gun practically shoots itself. It'd be my fave if it weren't for the tubular mag. Bleah.
 
Which Marlin do you like best, then? I was looking at a Model 795 and a Model 60SN at Bass Pro Shop and they both felt like they were cheaply manufactured crap (sorry, don't mean to insult your Marlins).

I love my Model 60; $160 delivered to my door and I practice by shooting thumbtacks off the target paper when I'm done with it. Never takes more than 5 shots to knock my targets off the backing at 25 yards, and that occasional 5th is entirely my own fault.

A stock 10/22 next to me one time was shooting pie-plate spreads at the same range.

The Marlin 60s are low-end rifles, don't get me wrong; their construction is a bit rough, but then you are only paying $160 for them; the important part is their reliable action and dead-on accuracy out of the box. Marlin has that set, but they aren't going to put in the top-end fit and finish for that price. Doesn't bother me none; I learned to shoot on a 70 year old Cooey, so using something ugly but laser accurate is the norm. If I wanted a pretty rifle, I'd start browsing Coopers. :p
 
What I don't care for on my SR22 is it is heavy, heavier then my ARs for crying out loud. The stock trigger was crap, so I put in a hornet kit, much better, also put in a quick mag release to. Further, put on a shortened Dlask barrel, a CTR stock and a sparc and that's about it. My 22s only see action for Gopher hunting and small birds not much more, most of time sitting in safe. They are a fun gun but abit complex in comparison to breakdown from some others out there, not saying they are difficult they are not but say for example compared to a AR yes they are a pain in a$$.
 
i own a Rem 597 myself, i prefered the feel of the stock over the basic 10/22,

however the 10/22 is likely more reliable.
 
I can't really complain about the accuracy of my 10/22. Even with the terrible trigger and no accuracy mods, and poor quality ammo, it is still capable of killing rabbits out to 100m and a little bit beyond. Which is why I bought it.
 
.22 caliber may not give you an adrenalin rush. But it's always pleasant to have one around to plink with. Specially @ times likes this when you plan to spend a nice day at the range. We certainly can't do that with other calibers unless we have a lot of dough to throw around.
I do enjoy my Ruger 10-22 sporter, as well as the Colt m4-22 when ever I feel tacti-coolish.
 
First rimfire was actually a Remington 597 that I bought from Reliable a long time ago. I took it home, played with it, and returned it the next day to pick up a 10/22 RR (20" barrel, no barrel band). Haven't looked back since. :D
 
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