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Cz452 .22Lr


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Right chaps, I'm on the verge of buying a secondhand CZ452 in .22LR to have some fun with and help with vermin control. I already have a HMR but fancy trying a .22 to see why some prefer them over the HMR.

 

Obviously, with subsonic ammo they are much quieter than the HMR and at half the energy have a more pronounced trajectory (which is half the fun) but what sort of groups should I expect to achieve and what would you say was the maximum, practical range for vermin control. Sub 80 yards?

 

 

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Any round and any calibre can ricochet, frankly I get sick of hearing all this about the .22lr, in many cases regurgitated I'm sure by someone who read something. (I'm not pointing any fingers here)

I never understand this phrase, rifle/calibres/ammo are tools, some are better suited to some land/distances/quarry than others, like all tools, when you do a job you chose the best suited for that jo

Back home, removed the stock, oily rag over the metal parts and the stock. Scoped up with my Hawke Frontier 3-9x40 and pinched the bipod and SAK mod off my HMR ready for testing tomorrow. Pretty happy

Mines zeroed at 50m and I get 20p sized grouping at that range, in my somewhat limited opinion, .22 fills the void between air rifle and .17hmr.

 

From what I've read/heard of people's experience, .22 is great for lamping as it's quite and .17hmr for daytime at longer ranges.

 

Not getting my .17 until my license comes back with it on so only going by what I've heard.

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Think the trigger kits are available from rimfire magic and are less than £20 worth the money and relatively easy to fit alot of how to guides on YouTube. That seems a cheap price to be fair, aslong as the bolt cycles smoothly and id also dry fire it to make sure it works and the safety works obviously other than that you should be good to go. Id personally would stay clear of any hv rounds as they are crap I have used eley subs rws sub and lapua subs. I now use winchester subs as they are easily accessible for me. However eley subs produce the best groups in my gun.

Enjoy it

 

Atb

Dan

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Think the trigger kits are available from rimfire magic and are less than £20 worth the money and relatively easy to fit alot of how to guides on YouTube. That seems a cheap price to be fair, aslong as the bolt cycles smoothly and id also dry fire it to make sure it works and the safety works obviously other than that you should be good to go. Id personally would stay clear of any hv rounds as they are crap I have used eley subs rws sub and lapua subs. I now use winchester subs as they are easily accessible for me. However eley subs produce the best groups in my gun.

Enjoy it

 

Atb

Dan

 

 

Paid £15 for my trigger kit from rimfire magic for my cz

Thanks chaps, seems cheap enough. Looking forward to it :thumbs:

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Get your hand in your pocket mate and get on with it :thumbs:

 

On a serious note though just watch the ear whizzers.

Will do :thumbs:

 

On a serious note, the ricochets are one of the things that has always put me off the .22LR

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Get your hand in your pocket mate and get on with it :thumbs:

 

On a serious note though just watch the ear whizzers.

Will do :thumbs:

 

On a serious note, the ricochets are one of the things that has always put me off the .22LR

 

 

 

they sound far worse than they are in reality, easy to stop though..............................................don't miss :laugh::laugh:

Any round and any calibre can ricochet, frankly I get sick of hearing all this about the .22lr, in many cases regurgitated I'm sure by someone who read something. (I'm not pointing any fingers here)

 

Don't miss and take care, yes, it has happened to me, but I select the best calibre and ammo for the ground and quarry, I don't get these bouncing all over the countryside all the time. There is no way in the world I would get rid of either of my current .22lrs because of some overhyped spiel about ricochet.

 

The .22lr is still by far the most popular civil calibre in the world, seems plenty of people can handle it perfectly satisfactorily.

Edited by Deker
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Right chaps, I'm on the verge of buying a secondhand CZ452 in .22LR to have some fun with and help with vermin control. I already have a HMR but fancy trying a .22 to see why some prefer them over the HMR.

 

Obviously, with subsonic ammo they are much quieter than the HMR and at half the energy have a more pronounced trajectory (which is half the fun) but what sort of groups should I expect to achieve and what would you say was the maximum, practical range for vermin control. Sub 80 yards?

I never understand this phrase, rifle/calibres/ammo are tools, some are better suited to some land/distances/quarry than others, like all tools, when you do a job you chose the best suited for that job

 

You select the best for the situation in hand, that doesn't/shouldn't mean, I prefer this gun to that gun, it should only mean, this is the best gun in this situation.

If some suggest they prefer the .22lr over the HMR than I can but suggest the best tool for the job was always a .22lr.

 

Once you have found the right ammo then .22lr sub sonic groups can be exceptionally good in the field. I seldom use mine past about 80 yards, and most commonly closer, simply because if I know the quarry will be 80+ yards away I will tend to take a different calibre! Many suggest 100yards or further in the field, even a sub retains lots of rabbit stopping energy at 100 yards, and if you are experienced at those distance and have nothing better with you then why not!? :thumbs:

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One tip...

You mentioned the price included 300 rounds of ammunition.

 

Dealers tend to throw that in as part of a deal but it is not much good to you if those 300 rounds don't really suit your gun.

 

I suggest you get a box each of whatever the dealer has in stock and then find out what suits the rifle best.

 

Zero at 50 yards and you should get groups at that distance which fit in the area of a 20p coin but only with the right ammunition.

 

Broadly speaking, you will be able to shoot from 15 to 55 yards 'flat', meaning within an area of one inch or less without holdover or holdunder. After 55 yards you will have to aim progressively higher to compensate for the drop.

 

Lots of practice on paper targets.

 

Enjoy

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Deker, simple fact is that people's opinions are often split over the 22/17 and that can be with exactly the same jobs in mind. Lamping, daytime sniping, a truck rifle whatever, there's no such thing as "the right tool for the job", only individual's subjective opinions on what their preferred tool is, and that can differ for any number of perfectly valid reasons

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Get your hand in your pocket mate and get on with it :thumbs:

On a serious note though just watch the ear whizzers.

 

Will do :thumbs:

On a serious note, the ricochets are one of the things that has always put me off the .22LR

 

If you use the sub sonic I dont think the ricochet, mind you the are no good on rabbits only if you head shot the whole time,

Ok for target shooting,

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