With the price of the various .22LR ammo out there you can do a lot of test with different brand and weight, at a very low price and improve you general accuracy.
I've been wondering, I've been shooting my .22LR at 100m and I get about a 3-4 inch drop. Is it normal? :confused:
At that time I was shooting Winchester Thundercat Ammo.
Very cheap, but once out of 10 bullets, you'd get a lil strayer.
I am unsure of what the advantage would be to cut down your barrel. Besides the fact it would make your rimfire a prohib.
I belive that shorter barrels that are designed to be shorter would be more accurate than a barrel that was designed to be longer and then cut down.
I used to have a 20" .920 barrel on my 10/22, I put a 16" GM fluted barrel on this spring..... I have seen better groups, and a higher FPS (about 175fps over the 20") since I installed the 16" barrel.
Whether this is from the "better" manufacturing process of the 2 barral companies, or the length of the barrel, or the design (the old one didn't have flutes, the new one does) I have no concrete answers for you in that regard......
I BELIVE (for lack of a better word) That a shorter stiffer barrel (ie: a Green Mountain 16" Fluted barrel) is better than most 20" barrels regardless of manufature.
my $.02
Cheers!
Are flutes not just to help shave some weight??
Welcome to the wonderful world of Savage Mark II's! I have yet to hear someone complain about their accuracy with these guns!
I think it is more accurate to say that due to the limited range potential of 22lr then the required accuracy of the barrel required to give satisfactory accuracy is generally less. In any case, 200yards is probably beyond the capabilities of the cartridge.
Best not let Eagleye see this thread, he's shot successfully at the 200yd line with his rimfires. http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php?t=263008&highlight=200m
The difficulty with achieving maximum accuracy with a rimfire is that you have to tune the rifle to the round, whereas it's the opposite in all other shooting.
I've had a tonne of fun doing some 200m+ plinking with my rimfires and would have no problem going for a gopher at 150.
Cheers,
Grant
Could very well be the case (pardon the pun)...However, I would think the problem would occur on a frequent basis if it were a situation similar to what you describe. Once the chamber is relatively clean, the extraction problem goes away but re-appears shortly thereafter, usually 200-300 rds. later.
I have the same problem but my gun is brand new. No reason they shouldn't be ejecting properly out of a new gun. I feel like I really have to slam the blot back to make it eject and even then it's not reliable.
Call or email Savage if you are having a problem with extraction. I did, they just sent me a new extractor and spring. I do belive I recieved the new parts in 2 days after making the call.
http://www.savagearms.com/contact.htm
Cheers!
Are there a lot of aftermarket parts and stocks for the Mk II? I just picked up a 10/22 I plan on picking up a tactical style stock, it being my fun rifle. But I would like to pick up a bolt action to keep in more of a rifle style shooter.