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How long for internal? My .223 is not a competition gun. Just my favorite truck gun
lol... yup on my truck gun! I even like the Hogue stock! It grips my window and doesn’t slide around!People still run those ???
*loseI might update it to a chassis that takes AR mags, but not if I loose oal.
Shit*lose
I have a 26" Valkyrie (Gas gun) and, while it's been a bit tough to keep in tune, I'm more than sold. It's in another league compared to a standard 223/556 running 77gr at mag length. In a bolt gun, it would be faster and likely much more consistent. It would not be too difficult to imagine 2900+ with solid brass life from bolt action.
That said, the 22 Creed has it's place in a bolt gun for pure speed from a short action. While it will be much flatter and faster than same bullet from a Valkyrie, the 224V has a distinct advantage in barrel life and cost of ammo/availability of ammo. Even if handloading, the Valkyrie will win in terms of powder/brass costs.
If you couple 3k-5k barrel life with variety of factory ammo for a pinch, it would seem that the more affordable trainer/all purpose rifle would be the Valkyrie. For match build though, I may lean towards the 22 Creed just under the speed limit of 3200fps with 88-90gr bullets.
Here are the theoretical ballistics for an 88ELDM from 22 Creed at 3150fps (first picture) vs 224V at 2900fps (2nd pic), 55deg, 1000feet:
View attachment 6975386
224V Bolt @ 2900fps
View attachment 6975387
The 224V is still flatter than a 140 VLD 6.5CM running around 2750 to 1000 yards. And it costs 50% less to shoot than the 6.5 and probably about 20% less than 22 Creed. Toss in 2 extra barrels for the 22Creed to make it to 5000 rounds and it's substantially more than the Valkyrie.
I didn't see anything in the OP about running any matches with speed limits, but if that's even a slight possibility, I think the Valkyrie is the better choice. With the 3200fps limit, you don't leave much on the table with the Valkyrie (maybe 100-200fps at most) before you hit the limit. While the 22 Creed will likely hit and pass it, it would be wasted capability and pushing excessive powder/pressure through barrel that simply means short barrel life.
I am thinking a properly bult bolt gun in 224V with a 26" barrel would be a ripping good match rifle with great barrel life. I'm gonna build one because ...well, why not?
I've been searching for any real-world people that have been tracking barrel life. I see the 3k, 4K,5k+ round count barrel life expectancy memtioned frequently (including by me but anecdotaly)but haven't seen anyone actually post that they've had a barrel go south at any specific range.The 6-8000 round barrel life with .224 Valkyrie, is it with a cut rifled barrel or will a button rifled barrel be able to do the same? Will there be an appreciable difference in barrel life between the two different styles of rifling in .224V ?
I've been searching for any real-world people that have been tracking barrel life. I see the 3k, 4K,5k+ round count barrel life expectancy memtioned frequently (including by me but anecdotaly)but haven't seen anyone actually post that they've had a barrel go south at any specific range.
I'm currently at 1500 rounds and going strong (.5-7moa consistently.) but that's a far cry from 4-5k+. My 223s have typically lost about .25-.4 moa around 3k rounds and stayed there through about 5k.
Has anyone here actually put 4000-5000 rounds through a Valkyrie with 80+GR projectiles? I'm legitimately asking because I am hoping we can find some proof positive for barrel life that is similar to 223s.
I hopefully a few owners that have gotten at least a few 2k+ round counts can share their insight.
Yes, makes me think Frank knows what he’s doing and this guy don’t know what he’s doing or has bad luck with buying bad chambered barrels in this cartridge and is now trashing it.It directly conflicts with Franks video about being able to stabilize the new long bullets in a 1-7" twist. Frank shows video to 2112. As much as I could watch the video, this guys shows himself and short range goups. To make that 2112 yd. range, the bullets have to be VERY stable coming out of the muzzle. So, I'm not thinking the twist is the issue. At least with the 80-90 gr. bullets.
He did have a few interesting points, but disagree with a few things in the video, specifically on the stabilizing ability of a 7T and need for 6.5 twist. I think a lot of people are attributing poor groups or inconsistent groups with bullet instability. While it's possible to get bad groups with instability, you would be more likely to see good/okay groups at 100 that open WAY UP as you go out further and further. It's much more likely that poor grouos are a product of the load, chamber, throat, and gas port screwing up a bullet on its way out of the tube.It directly conflicts with Franks video about being able to stabilize the new long bullets in a 1-7" twist. Frank shows video to 2112. As much as I could watch the video, this guys shows himself and short range goups. To make that 2112 yd. range, the bullets have to be VERY stable coming out of the muzzle. So, I'm not thinking the twist is the issue. At least with the 80-90 gr. bullets.
You make a really good point. There are so many factors that go into tuning a super tight shooting load.He did have a few interesting points, but disagree with a few things in the video as well. Especially on the stabilizing ability and need for 6.5 twist. I think a lot of people are attributing poor groups or inconsistent groups with bullet instability. It's much more likely that it's simply an artifact of the chamber, throat, and gas port screwing up a bullet on its way out of the tube.
Anyone who has loaded a 223 knows that even 55gr FMJs can shoot like crap out of a 1:8 or 1:9 twist, and they are VERY twist stabilized for their size.
The only powder I've had consistent success with sub-moa loads is CFE223 and even then it takes a LOT of tuning to produce best results. So much so that I found I needed to start a basic OCW with .2gr powder increments because the velocity changes so quickly (about 10-15fps/.1gr of powder). After finding a good SD Node with decent precision, I then went through seating depths at .010 increments. .010 made a big difference between groups. Here is a picture of of recent 88 ELD CFE223 development done specifically for suppressor:
Top row is seating depth test of same charge 25.4gr CFE223, middle row is confirmation of the 2.270" OAL shot the next day. Bottom row is gas tuning (first is adjustment up, and then shot on another target while getting bolt to cycle perfectly, then next two are with correct gas).
View attachment 6977813
The middle row group at 1.05" is an unsuppressed group with the same load.
Also, gas block and spring tuning helped significantly. With +2 gas systems and long barrels, the dwell time is incredibly long on 22+ barrels so timing the extraction point is critical to ensure consistent extraction AFTER bullet has left the barrel rather than during bullet travel.
If shooting suppressed, my best loads for unsuppressed shooting are NOT the same as for suppressed. They are about .2-.4gr different from one another (generally lower) which speaks to the
Essentially, I think this catridge can be picky: you need a solid barrel mfg, good reamer, gas/buffer tuning, and very good reloading testing techniques to achieve good results. Additionally, there aren't a lot of good single base powders that have known performance that meet the pressure needs for this round (i.e. temp stable and slow burn rate). CFE223 and BLC2 are slow but they are ball Double base powders. XBR8208/Varget are too fast to achieve good velocity and H4350 is too bulky/slow. It's almost like we need an H4350 Short cut powder to create a slow but less bulky powder that's temp stable.
Wrote way more than expected so I'm leaving it there. Lol
Part of the issue I see is the semi Auto platform and most of these guys just don't drive the rifles well.
I do think it's something other than twist as I have shot, 90s, 88s, 75s and 62s out of mine, all those are factory ammo, and I had zero issues with accuracy. The 90s I waited on until I was told the problem with that initial load was fixed and the 90 stuff we shot was sub-MOA, which honestly was the last holdout to check. Everything else was sub 1/2 MOA for me.
Because we shoot both Semi Auto and bolt action variants, I think we had a good handle on what it capable of delivering.
Taking these round from 100 yards to 2112 yards, and also shooting it competition, I really like it and the only downside I saw was needing more time to understand the wind changes after 600-700 yards depending on the load.
The elevation is no issue, it shoots pretty darn flat, but after 600 the wind really starts to play with it and if you want accuracy you have to stay on top of the wind call.
Inside its money, and at 100 yards the groups were no issue at all. Why people are focused on two guys who had bad luck is beyond me.
A lot of this speculation stuff is the issue thing guys said about the 6.5CM too, it was a FAD right up until the Army said it worked better then everyone started shutting up about the 6.5CM.
This thread is about to cost me money! Everytime I read new posts, I want to buy/build a bolt Valkyrie even more. I see either an MPA 224V bolt or other custom action 224V in my future.
It's easy on wallet, shoulder and gives great practice reading wind but with similar drop to a 6.5CM 140 out to 700 or so and beyond that it's still in the ballpark. If a bolt can push 88/90gr at 2900+ accurately, like Mike and Frank did in bolt gun video, it's a good trainer. My gasser will push them 2800+ but at the expense of brass and moderate precision, so they've been backed down to 2680.
The 22 Creed has it's place if you really just want to toss a light bullet REALLY fast, but it seems like barrel life will be the killer. Could be nice for dedicated sub 900yard competition rifle when conditions for spotting misses allow. I'd just be concerned about less skilled spotters not recording hits with either cartridge.
BTW, I really miss your old avatar... #BringBenderBack...lolC., I don’t shoot competitions so I’m not that concerned about points. Where I go shoot prairie dogs it’s really dusty 90% of the time, and I can spot 55 grain splash add 1000 yards. Not that I’m not accurate add 1000 yards with 55 grains, it’s just that they are really cheap to reload so you send five instead of one and see if the wind is smiling on you that day.
Maybe someone can better enlighten me on the benefits of the 22 Creed though?
Two reasons....
1. Speed
2. Critter killa'
Two reasons not to do .22creed
1. Barrel burner
2. Barrel burner
3 actually.... no factory support on rifles or ammo
Two reasons....
1. Speed
2. Critter killa'
lol....Yes. I hadn’t made it to three. That’s one more braincell than I have.
Two reasons not to do .22creed
1. Barrel burner
2. Barrel burner
I get both of those with regards to killing critters, I meant more for matches and whatnot
https://www.primalrights.com/library/cartridge-guides/22-creedmoor
Better get a barrel nutI'll stick with the 22-250.
You didn’t read the rest of the thread then, did you?In my opinion the great thing about a 22cm is speed. You can easily get a heavy 22 bullet to 3150 (speed for match guns) out of much shorter barrels. Or if you want extreme speeds you can do that as well in a 24-26 inch barrels(3500)
An 88 gr bullet at 3200 is an amazing killer on all typical southern game. Pigs deer coyotes etc.....
Looking at the numbers my 18inch and my 22 inch 22cm’s hang with my 26 inch 6xc with dtacs out to about 1100 yds because of speed.
A Valkyrie just doesn’t have the ass/speed to be a viable long range cartridge in my opinion. You just can’t get those bullets to do what they are designed to do at the slow speeds that the Valkyrie produces.
Caliber matrix it, the Valkyrie is a better bang for your buck with a great potential and the best barrel life of anything out there that has any chance at competing
Barrel is expected around 6000 to 8000 rounds, Jim Gilliand is already beyond 5000+ still shooting 1/2 MOA.
We shot a bolt gun variant from MHSA using an Origin. Action and 26”. Barrel.
2880fps with 88s and 3120fps with 80s
What we saw with the cartridge is great results with no recoil, long barrel life, good velocity
The rest is empty speculation as we pushed it hard and far
Thanks for pointing out that I lack in knowledge and experience. I was unaware of my deficiencies. I hate being so stupid.
I haven’t seen a 223 come anywhere near a Valkyrie in performance.I Would go 22 Creedmoor hands down. I can’t think of a single reason to buy a Valkyrie. The 223 that you already have will perform within 95% of the Valkyrie for a lot less money and headaches. If you want something in between the 223 and 22Creedmoor I would get a 22br. This is assuming we are talking bolt guns I would not attempt a 22 br semi auto rifle.