Any if you guys do this? I started looking at reloading and looked very complicated. Then noticed that the .22 seemed more simple. What cost saving is there on these cheap rounds?
Any if you guys do this? I started looking at reloading and looked very complicated. Then noticed that the .22 seemed more simple. What cost saving is there on these cheap rounds?
Not practical as you cannot buy the cases etc.
If you reuse old cases then you need to mix a primer powder with glycerine and place around the rim of the case etc....then find a decent heeled bullet to fit
In the USA you can buy a kit to do this as described above but they is plenty of factory ammo about etc
But people like to be different lol
email...... stephenbarrow@ntlworld.com
Thanks for the reply.
It is a very interesting process. Definately above me. But I guess when shooting large cal guns the cost of ammunition is expensive.
I'm a big salmon and Seatrout angler and my hobbie when I couldn't fish was to make my own flies. Very satisfying when you catch on your own fly. I would imagine getting nice tight consistent groups on your home loads would have the same feeling.
Centrefire reloading is much simpler and easier than rimfire reloading.
I thought about this when I read about Aguila 60gn subsonics - but couldn't find a uk source.
Just not realistic.
If you can follow instructions and safely operate a set of precision scales without supervision then you can reload. Loading data handbooks are there to be read and used to SAFELY make or reload cartridges, they are not a rough guide for imaginative explosive adventurers. The propellant is not, in itself, a high explosive, unlike the priming compound in a rimfire cartridge.
You will notice that every single document about reloading has, as part of the preamble, a strong warning NOT to exceed the documented loads - if you do, then the onus is entirely on you.
tac
While most bolt action rifles will cycle these most semis wont.
Not exactly what you want but I would think they can steer you to the importer, you can then advise your local RFD etc,
http://www.suffolkrifle.co.uk/shop/a...dard-velocity/
Do not even think about reloading a rimmy case, the priming compound is very volatile. If you want to reload but not spend to much dosh get a CZ 527 in 17 Hornet, then spend £600 on a good reloading set up and get one one to one tuition on how to use it. After a while you will shoot to reload rather than the other way round.
A
I think thats another reason its not so popular, they are relatively cheap to buy "ready made". I think there was some sort of shortage in the U.S. a few years back (no idea why?) and more and more people were looking into it but it didnt seem to come to anything. I always wondered if you could use nail gun blanks to help with the primer but wouldnt try it, sometimes its difficult enough to get my nail gun to work with Hilti cartridges never mind using the ingredients in something its not designed for
I've reloaded for nearly 50 years and never heard of anyone doing .22 RF. It isn't practical.
For a start, it'd be a puzzle to get the original firing pin indentation out of the rim. So far as I can see, it could only be done hydraulically, and that'd require some precision - therefore expensive - tooling.
If you didn't remove the indentation, you'd be left with the risk that the pin would strike the same place again, where there'd be little or no priming compound - once you'd found some more fancy precision kit to spin compound into the rim like they do in the factories. That risk would increase the more you reloaded the case.
You could probably charge the cases similarly to CF cases, except that your tolerances would be very tight for such small propellant quantities.
Then there's crimping the case on a heeled bullet to the same diameter... the list goes on. All for the cheapest round on the market?
...history... is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind. (Edward Gibbon: Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire)
I reload .22 Rimfire, not a hard process to be honest. Find it fun and a finger to those who say it can't be done haha, all good fun
the yanks were/are doing it as they are were not able to get .22 ammo.idiots over there were hoarding it buying it all up and selling on.wallmart i think it was were selling it all as soon as it came in and people could ony buy a small ammount at a time
email...... stephenbarrow@ntlworld.com
i say good on him for doing it personally
agree its pointless but so is climbing a big mountain......its a case of its there and i done it
email...... stephenbarrow@ntlworld.com