Until recently I was not even aware a 22lr was effective past 150 yards. It has some impressive capability.
There was an old thread on Snipers Hide where a guy wanted to test the lethality of the .22lr round on a clothed turkey at 300yds and even the sub-sonic stuff penetrated very well through clothing, innards, and the turkey itself. It's at least 3 or 4 years old.
Yeah...hitting something past 100 yards with a .22 is not as easy as it sounds. I am not saying it is not doable, but it is not that easy with non match grade bullets.
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300 yards with a subsonic round? I just don't see how that will be accurate...
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My work internet never loads videos properly but I am interested. What does the video not do for 22's?
Why wouldn't it be? It generally would be more accurate than a super sonic round.
At 300 yards? It just seems like the bullet would drop a decent amount at such a slow speed.
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At 300 yards? It just seems like the bullet would drop a decent amount at such a slow speed.
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Yes, there is more of a drop but subsonic flight is going to be more consistent. I have done some shooting at up to 300 yards with my suppressed Savage FV-SR using Wolf Match Target (subsonic/standard velocity) ammo. It is quite surprising how accurate it is if you can find a day with little to no wind. It may have taken a few tries but I was able to hit a clay pigeon usually in under 5 tries at 275 yards.
Wow. I had trouble shooting the cap off a water bottle at 50 yards with subsonic rounds. Put in reg 22s and hit it first shot. I kinda figured it was the rounds...but it could have been just me.
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You make accuracy judgements for long range .22lr ballistics and capabilities based off of that?
Yup. I'm not too into the whole ballistics calculations stuff. I probably should learn more.
Think of sub-sonic ballistics just like throwing a rock. You still have environmental factors (gravity, wind, etc.) playing on the bullet, but things are much more simple in terms of bullet stabilization. Water doesn't turn to vapor, things don't slow down as rapidly, and the bullet doesn't have 40g's of force trying to overcome it anymore. Of course there will be a point where the bullet starts to tumble, but with the center of gravity so far forward (like on a .22lr bullet) it can stay stable at pretty slow speeds. That is the same reason certain bullet designs like the 180gr RN are ideal for .308win sub-sonic rounds.
There was an old thread on Snipers Hide where a guy wanted to test the lethality of the .22lr round on a clothed turkey at 300yds and even the sub-sonic stuff penetrated very well through clothing, innards, and the turkey itself. It's at least 3 or 4 years old.