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Wondering:
- long spire tips effect on feeding
- Spire tips are an advantage ballistically for supersonic flight but not for subsonic. Is this round supposed to go and stay supersonic for an extended period of time?
- What will the effect on cleaning intervals be switching from waxed lead to copper. Match .22's typically go many hundreds of rounds between cleanings with no ill effect using waxed lead projectiles. It's one of the things I love about them.
- A lower density turned bullet will yield higher initial velocity but you are still going to be near the sound barrier. How many yards could you conceivably keep above it? That transition back past is a bitch and is actually worse for things that are lighter as well as longer and thinner. On paper this looks to present a significant challenge to the design.
- Trying to boost .22lr pressures is actually a bit tricky as you have to be able to crush the weakest part of the case for ignition and still not have a case head failure. I have experienced plenty of case head failures with high pressure .22lr ammo even at their current, barely supersonic at 100yds level.
So...... I'm curious how they intend to tackle all the intrinsic design difficulties.
Exactly what I was thinking...The speed I was quoted was very close to supersonic at sea level. Too close for me to feel comfortable.
I have always wondered why they don’t make a lead Bullets with a higher BC. I mean just make it shaped different with the same speed should still put out a greater advantage then the rounded bullet.
I see this almost as a novelty. Your gonna be paying more then .223 loads most likely. Hell Lapua Cent-X gets close or over now.
I get what your saying but that’s complesance I’m in a field that wasn’t developed since it’s creation.
everything we know or think we know is based on an old concept designed for short range application. Bullet and every component are made in consequence.
Now come innovation and your reaction is normal but you need to understand than it’s predominantly a project for ELR that will require twist not yet available in 22RF. Later CE said they will make ammo for the commercial twist.
Bullet will be lighter as it’s copper and speed will go with it. Now since bullet won’t be of the same nature we wont probably see the same limitation and issues with engagement past 100 yards and with current ammo w/ supersonic-Transonic speeds.
Other than that a simple improvement in B.C and flight characteristics will be an improvement in a field where noting was done since forever.
jbell:I understand that completely, but my point is if your trying to optimize for longer distance then why play “just the tip” with a small capacity rimfire caliber and shoot centerfire. For me the draw to rimfire is taking a caliber designed for short range and one that is MASSIVELY effected by atmospherics and seeing what the shooter can do. By altering that premise to an extreme like this concept or any of the fast 17 calibers then you have just created a completely different game.
But that’s just me...
I get what your saying but that’s complesance I’m in a field that wasn’t developed since it’s creation.
everything we know or think we know is based on an old concept designed for short range application. Bullet and every component are made in consequence.
Now come innovation and your reaction is normal but you need to understand than it’s predominantly a project for ELR that will require twist not yet available in 22RF. Later CE said they will make ammo for the commercial twist.
Bullet will be lighter as it’s copper and speed will go with it. Now since bullet won’t be of the same nature we wont probably see the same limitation and issues with engagement past 100 yards and with current ammo w/ supersonic-Transonic speeds.
Other than that a simple improvement in B.C and flight characteristics will be an improvement in a field where noting was done since forever.
jbell:
Your point is well taken. All agree on wanting more consistent small caliber rimfire ammunition as long as the price isn't too high.
However, what constitutes a completely different game? What about 22LR rifles with a single digit twist rate? Are they a different game? To me your 6 x 5 challenge shooting with ground-bipod-bag is a different game than bench-bipod-bag, especially if one bag is tactical and the other heavy F-Class/benchrest. In terms of challenge it could be keeping your shots within a 6.0 MOA disk at 50 yd shooting standing offhand or a 0.10 MOA disk at 50 yd shooting high-tech benchrest. Whatever game you want to play.
Perhaps the ultimate test of marksmanship is shooting an airgun standing offhand at a target several hundred yards away.
Exactly what I was thinking...
I am very happy and excited to see all this interest in the rimfire world and more specific the 22lr world. I truly love the challenge of making that little caliber do something most think it can’t do. However IMO if you introduce a drastically new design of bullet (like in this thread) that is substantially lighter or heavier and start pushing them as hard as you can for the case capacity then for me the game has changed & I’m not interested at that point. What I am wanting to see is more quality control in the current 22lr configuration, like better priming compounds for a more controlled ignition, more precise powder metering from round to round, maybe even new powder development for more consistency. But absolutely keeping with the round nose / EPS (or similar) 40 grain bullet at around 1040-1080 FPS, because that is the challenge that makes this game fun!
This isn’t to take away from this thread, Cutting Edge’s bullets or anything like that. It’s just me talking out loud...
That's an interesting point. A great deal of the draw for .22lr from a competition standpoint is that, with the round itself, there is no equipment race. Essentially every brand is making a 40gr waxed lead projectile of similar shape that goes ~1040-1080 fps. Everybody on the line is basically dealing with those same limitations. Those limitations are both something of an equalizer and also allow safe competition at the smaller facilities present in the eastern U.S. Not being able to (and therefore gaining advantage by) reload it, having barrels last a lifetime, not having to clean much, and lower average per round cost (especially if you practice with slightly cheaper fodder) are also nice selling points.
I should note that historically, these selling points have been enough to cause .22lr versions of shooting competitions to tend to become more popular than their often centerfire progenitors. This is even true for Benchrest, a fact I have always found strange since so much of the competition in that discipline is actually about reloading and so much has been done to minimize the shooter to the point even of not holding the rifle. I do expect, by the way, .22lr PRS style stuff to eventually become more popular than it's centerfire progenitor. People may buy it as a trainer but I expect them to eventually prefer competing with that trainer.
I agree with jbell in that what I am most interested in new .22lr ammo (besides domestically made good stuff perhaps by Lapua at the Berger facility) is better shot to shot velocity consistency and especially temperature stability from 40gr waxed lead stuff at 1040-1080 fps. People already turned .22lr into a light, fast, mini-centerfire round by the way. It's called 17 Mach2.
let’s now see what can be done for real and push the envelope without being stuck in the past.
hlee:22lr not an equipment race? Bwahahaha...
Texas Precision Matches started hosting 22lr matches in 2018. The first that I shot was about 1/2 way through that season, with a Kidd rifle and CCI ammunition. I finished somewhere in the middle of the field composed of 14 or so shooters with CZs, another Kidd, and an assortment of "squirrel rifles." I'm pretty sure the shooter with the other Kidd won that match. Fast forward a few months and with CenterX ammunition and that same rifle, I shot high score in 3 of those matches, though most of the squirrel rifles were staying home and we were starting to see a few Voodoo rifles on the line (2 or 3). July of 2019, I was 7 points out of 1st place (he dropped 3) and finished 3rd, in a field of a few Voodoo rifles and an assortment of upgraded others. 1 and 2 were Voodoos.
Last weekend we shot our first 22 match in several months. There were 28(?) shooters and at least a dozen Voodoo rifles on the line. We had the only semi auto on the line (my son and I share a gun), and with rifle sharing, may have been the only people NOT shooting a Voodoo. I shot essentially the same score I did several months prior (dropped 12 instead of 10) and finished tied for 21st place. I heard one of the match directors refer to the match, not as a bolt gun match, but as a Voodoo Match.
No, to my mind, 22lr is an even bigger gear race than centerfire. No, you don't need a RRS tripod and a $400 bipod, and a "gamer plate." And, you generally don't see guys wearing team jerseys at a 22 match. But, you can most certainly throw money at inaccuracy and make that problem go away. Buy a $1500 barreled action, drop it into a $1000 stock, put a $3000 optic in a $400 mount on top, and feed it $20 per box ammunition selected from a lot testing facility. A rig like this would look silly with a Harris knock off, so go ahead and get that Ckye-pod.
Now, we've got 4 new entries into the "Voodoo space" (Bergara, Impact, Bighorn, Christianson). Maybe there are others. This new ammo is just one more salvo in the 22lr gear war. Hopefully it does well. Hopefully it's affordable. This is where I expect to be disappointed.
Probably because I have seen it both ways, and was too lazy to look it up. Thanks for the clarification...hlee:
Why do you spell Vudoo Voodoo? Vudoo has one less letter than Voodoo?
Oops, Ultimatum. This is what happens when you don't double check your memory... Editting previous post.Also did I miss the announcement that Impact is now making a 22 action?
hlee:22lr not an equipment race? Bwahahaha...
Texas Precision Matches started hosting 22lr matches in 2018. The first that I shot was about 1/2 way through that season, with a Kidd rifle and CCI ammunition. I finished somewhere in the middle of the field composed of 14 or so shooters with CZs, another Kidd, and an assortment of "squirrel rifles." I'm pretty sure the shooter with the other Kidd won that match. Fast forward a few months and with CenterX ammunition and that same rifle, I shot high score in 3 of those matches, though most of the squirrel rifles were staying home and we were starting to see a few Voodoo rifles on the line (2 or 3). July of 2019, I was 7 points out of 1st place (he dropped 3) and finished 3rd, in a field of a few Voodoo rifles and an assortment of upgraded others. 1 and 2 were Voodoos.
Last weekend we shot our first 22 match in several months. There were 28(?) shooters and at least a dozen Voodoo rifles on the line. We had the only semi auto on the line (my son and I share a gun), and with rifle sharing, may have been the only people NOT shooting a Voodoo. I shot essentially the same score I did several months prior (dropped 12 instead of 10) and finished tied for 21st place. I heard one of the match directors refer to the match, not as a bolt gun match, but as a Voodoo Match.
No, to my mind, 22lr is an even bigger gear race than centerfire. No, you don't need a RRS tripod and a $400 bipod, and a "gamer plate." And, you generally don't see guys wearing team jerseys at a 22 match. But, you can most certainly throw money at inaccuracy and make that problem go away. Buy a $1500 barreled action, drop it into a $1000 stock, put a $3000 optic in a $400 mount on top, and feed it $20 per box ammunition selected from a lot testing facility. A rig like this would look silly with a Harris knock off, so go ahead and get that Ckye-pod.
Now, we've got 4 new entries into the "Voodoo space" (Bergara, Ultimatum, Bighorn, Christenson). Maybe there are others. This new ammo is just one more salvo in the 22lr gear war. Hopefully it does well. Hopefully it's affordable. This is where I expect to be disappointed.
22lr not an equipment race? Bwahahaha...
Texas Precision Matches started hosting 22lr matches in 2018. The first that I shot was about 1/2 way through that season, with a Kidd rifle and CCI ammunition. I finished somewhere in the middle of the field composed of 14 or so shooters with CZs, another Kidd, and an assortment of "squirrel rifles." I'm pretty sure the shooter with the other Kidd won that match. Fast forward a few months and with CenterX ammunition and that same rifle, I shot high score in 3 of those matches, though most of the squirrel rifles were staying home and we were starting to see a few Voodoo rifles on the line (2 or 3). July of 2019, I was 7 points out of 1st place (he dropped 3) and finished 3rd, in a field of a few Voodoo rifles and an assortment of upgraded others. 1 and 2 were Voodoos.
Last weekend we shot our first 22 match in several months. There were 28(?) shooters and at least a dozen Voodoo rifles on the line. We had the only semi auto on the line (my son and I share a gun), and with rifle sharing, may have been the only people NOT shooting a Voodoo. I shot essentially the same score I did several months prior (dropped 12 instead of 10) and finished tied for 21st place. I heard one of the match directors refer to the match, not as a bolt gun match, but as a Voodoo Match.
No, to my mind, 22lr is an even bigger gear race than centerfire. No, you don't need a RRS tripod and a $400 bipod, and a "gamer plate." And, you generally don't see guys wearing team jerseys at a 22 match. But, you can most certainly throw money at inaccuracy and make that problem go away. Buy a $1500 barreled action, drop it into a $1000 stock, put a $3000 optic in a $400 mount on top, and feed it $20 per box ammunition selected from a lot testing facility. A rig like this would look silly with a Harris knock off, so go ahead and get that Ckye-pod.
Now, we've got 4 new entries into the "Voodoo space" (Bergara, Ultimatum, Bighorn, Christenson). Maybe there are others. This new ammo is just one more salvo in the 22lr gear war. Hopefully it does well. Hopefully it's affordable. This is where I expect to be disappointed.
What is considered ELR for 22lr?
300 yards???
400 yards???
I plugged a random BC of .280 for my CenterX profile into my ballistics app.. Left everything else the same. The differences between the two profiles were relatively similar out to 200. Beyond that, it became very apparent what these little solids might be capable of, not just in drop, but also in wind drift.wondering how much a shaped 22 would be vrs the normal 22 and how much better if any would the performance could be ?
Guys are trying 600+
But really if a good group at 200 is the size of your fist +/-
4-500 is ELR or what I consider ELR / reasonable hit percentage.
it’ll go 1.5-2 miles but 20 shots to hit a piece of plywood at 800 yards is not my cup of tea.
So if you need a one and six twist barrel for the most aggressive of these new projectiles, will you be able to use that same barrel for regular standard 40 grain sub sonic? I’m fine with using these for really true extreme long range 22 shooting, but I don’t want to be having to use them for positional training at Short ranges because I can’t put standard sub ammo through the same gun.