I know jbell has seen this rifle before, and it's more $$$ than he's currently wanting to spend, but what the heck...he once told me that he loved the looks of this rifle, so here it is again -
I ordered it in with an ACE 18" Ranch bbl, because I was looking to put together the lightest V22 I could. But balance was so far to the rear with that bbl - even though it shot great - that I pulled it & got a Krieger #4 sporter profile blank, chambered it with my EPS reamer, then finished it at 24" & threaded the muzzle 1/2-28 for the TD22 in the photo. With a Manners T2 Elite Hunter & the Athlon Midas TAC 6-24x50, it weighs 9.5lbs, a bit more than I was expecting, but it balances right at the front of the DBM without the suppressor mounted, and it shoots great. Since I took that photo, I've CeraKoted the bbl in graphite black.
The only other 22RF that I've built in an attempt to wind up with a lighter rifle that's about as accurate as this one is a CZ 457 American that didn't shoot worth a hoot with the factory bbl. I pulled & replaced it with a Shilen select match ratchet #5 conour, then parted-off the 1.200" shank & turned the transition radius down to a .708" tenon to be a snug fit in the 457's bbl socket, chambered it with the same EPS reamer I used on the above rifle, cut the extractor slots in an indexer fixture in my knee mill, finished it at 24", threaded the muzzle 1/2-28, CeraKoted it with a mixture of graphite black/tungsten in an attempt to match the nitride finish of the action, and glued it in with Loctite #609. It weighs 9lbs, which is 1/2lb more than it did with the factory bbl. The Turkish walnut of the CZ stock is pretty dense & heavy, but the Shilen bbl is pretty close to the same weight as the Krieger I used on the V22. The 457 action is obviously lighter than the V22, and quite a bit less expensive. I really like the fully adjustable 457 trigger, and all three of the 457s I've owned have functioned smoothly with complete reliability - otherwise, I wouldn't have gone to the trouble & expense to re-barrel this American.