Dave, Dan and Lucho, I appreciate the advice and the what could happen if...
Frank Tirrell who writes for the Small Caliber News and the Precision Shooting Magazine amongst others has actually experimented with .22 Rimfire Chambers ("Small Caliber News" Winter Edition 2003 Vol.6 No.4).
In the article Frank Tirrell compares SPORTING CHAMBERS (read lose) to MATCH CHAMBERS (read tight) and comes to the conclusion that match chambers perform better than sporting chambers because they were designed for the purpose of attaining better accuracy. He quotes F.W. Mann the author of "The Bullet's Flight," published in 1909 "where he goes to great lengths to point out that a projectile that starts crooked in the bore does NOT straighten out in the bore. In turn it exits the barrel crooked allowing gasses to escape out one side tipping the projectile even further enlarging the projectiles gyroscopic spin on its route to the target" In my opinion a very interesting article.
Frank Tyrell has authored other rimfire articles for "Precision Shooting" in one of them using a sander he removed lead from the tip of some Eley 10x bullets so they looked like semi wad cutters and achieved better accuracy, believe it or not.
Frank Tyrell has also designed a nifty little tool that removes the ring of lead that forms just ahead of the chamber, which affects accuracy and is very difficult to remove.
For those of you that wish to read the article in its entirety I will include the phone number of the Editor of Small Caliber News 330 897 0614 and their Web link
www.smallcaliber.com by the way I have nothing to do with either magazine I just find their articles interesting and at times very helpful.
I came to the same conclusion as Dave's of using custom barrels with match chambers to be able to use less expensive ammo with success some twenty years back. Tony