Posted on 09/24/2010 8:45:36 AM PDT by marktwain
Nice combo. I’m with you.
However; I do have a Mossberg shot gun that I can hit 50 at trap consistently. Don’t ask about skeet. ;o)
Rick....#4 buck should be your inside the house AP round. Have slugs and 0 or OO buck for when you have to shoot through your own walls or car doors.
If that is seriously it they will sell a ton of them.
PC Walmart won’t be allowed to carry them unless: They come in a pretty colors. They turn that black stock to a nice walnut finish. They take off the flash hider and pistol grip. And limit it to a three round magazine. With those changes, they would probably want to sell it in full-auto and seek exemption from the NFA.
Don’t let more than half a dozen get together or you’re a goner.
At ranges inside a residence, #8 birdshot from a 12 gauge aimed at the head will blind the average perp, then you can finish the episode as you see fit.
That's where you'd like one of these, w/ its 50rd mags:
I bought a Smith and Wesson M&P15R 5.45 x 39mm a couple of years ago and about 10,000 rounds of Russian ammo (cheap but corrosive, but OK if weapon is cleaned properly). I’ve been satisfied with the purchase.
Found this elsewhere on the web
In March of 1980, the obstreperous militant leftist Oscar Romero, Archbishop of San Salvador, was assassinated outside of the city’s main cathedral. The assassin employed a scoped, turn-bolt rifle chambered for the .22 LR round, and fired from a distance of 80 meters. Romero was killed by a single bullet to the heart.
And -
F.B.I. statistics clearly show more people in the U.S. die, accidentally or intentionally, every year from .22 LR gunshot wounds than any other round.
I owuld note that this stat may be driven more by lack of pre-hospital care or that folks simplely own more 22LR weapons than not.
But - get shot by anything - and not have a truma center nearby - and you may become parts of these grim statistics..
Also - The bulk of sound-suppressed pistols designed for covert use by clandestine operatives have been chambered for 22LR - think Mossad.
IIRC, Ruger stopped making the 10/22 Magnum several years ago. Used examples bring premium prices. Also, Remington recalled its Model 597 rifles in .22WMR not long ago.
It's a tough cartridge to successfully use in an autoloader (at least of the traditional blow-back design). I think AMT still makes their stainless 10/22 clone in .22 Mag, and Volquartsen has a version of the hot-rod rimfire too. Even so, the ranks of rimfire magnum semi-autos are definitely thin.
I've been hoping to see a .22 WMR conversion for the AR-15, but so far everything of the sort is still in prototype stage.
I own 2 military surplus Mossberg 500s.
If it’s good enough for the army it will be fine for home defense.
I agree with you. A 10/22 with a high quality 30 round mag might not be the best choice for home protection but it is still a very very good one.
my brother used to have a “suppressed .22” for dealing with varmints without alarming the chickens...it was a .22 that had a nipple from baby calf bottle fastened to the end of the barrel with a radioator clamp...unfortunately, that gun was lost in the tragic house fire along with all the rest...
Tactical my ass. This thing is no more tactical than my Remington nylon 66. Any gun is better than no gun at all when you need a gun but if you get into a shoot out with this thing move out as quickly as possible if you are able to.
I feel the same about ARs.
Yes
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS Calibers: .22 Magnum (.22WMR) Weight unloaded: 13.6oz. 385.6g Loaded Magazine: 6oz. 170.1g Length: 7.9" 200.7mm Height: 5.8" 147.3mm Width: 1.3" 33.0mm Barrel length: 4.3" 109.2mm Sight radius: 6.9" 175.3mm Energy (40gr): 138ft-lbs 187J Capacity: 30 rounds Trigger pull: 4-6 lbs 17.8-26.7N Slide and barrel are 4140 steel, frame is 7075 aluminum.
Grip, slide cover, trigger, mag release, and safety
levers are glass reinforced Nylon (Zytel), much like other
Kel-Tec Pistols. Magazine is Also Zytel and holds 30 rounds,
with round count ports. Other features include: dual opposing extractors for reliability, heel
magazine release to aid in magazine retention, dovetailed aluminum front sight,
Picatinny accessory rail under the barrel, Urethane recoil buffer,
captive coaxial recoil springs.
The barrel is fluted for light weight and effective heat dissipation.
PMR30 disassembles for cleaning by removal of a single pin. Description MSRP PMR-30 $ 415.00
My tube-fed Marlin .22 doesn’t even make a “bang”, it’s more like a loud SNAP, like you were braking twigs or something...
snap... snap... snap
Darn nice little gun. Long barrel too.
this one didn’t even do that...it was mpre like a muffled click...too bad about that fire...
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