Author Topic: .22 Hornet Shooters  (Read 4223 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Lawdog

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4464
.22 Hornet Shooters
« Reply #30 on: March 01, 2005, 12:55:43 PM »
Quote from: creekchub
what grain of bullet and design would you use in the hornet.  i was thinking of using a 40 gr. nossler bt.  but somebody told me to stick with the hornet style bullets for yote and fox,  something about the polymar tiped bullets exiting and the solid points not.  i would of thought it was the other way around!


I use Nosler Ballistic Tips in my Hornets for all my called in varmints.  Works great and gives better accuracy.  Lawdog
 :D
Gary aka Lawdog is now deceased. He passed away on Jan. 12, 2006. RIP Lawdog. We miss you.

Offline Joel

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • A Real Regular
  • ****
  • Posts: 933
.22 Hornet Shooters
« Reply #31 on: April 26, 2005, 05:41:42 AM »
Good squirrel load is betweeen 4.0-5.0 grs of Unique with the Speer 46 gr Flatpoint designed for the 218 Bee/Marlin classic.  Velocity is around 1500-1600 fps(book value) and accuracy is excellent in both my Savage 24V and NEF using 4.2 grs.

Offline lakota

  • Trade Count: (26)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3472
  • Gender: Male
.22 Hornet Shooters
« Reply #32 on: May 01, 2005, 08:03:15 AM »
I have a Ruger 77/22 Hornet VHZ. My best load so far is 12.7 Grs Lil' Gun with a 35 Gr Hornady V-Max bullet. I use winchester brass. For me CCI standard small pistol primers and the Winchester standard small pistol primers seem to be interchangeable with this load with no effect on accuracy. The worts 5 shot groups I have gotten with this load were slightly under an inch at 100 yds. most 5 shot groups range from 0.50" to 0.75". Yesterday I shot my personal best group ever-a 5 shot 100 yard group that measured 0.236". The man I bought the rifle from had installed a spring and sear kit so it has a very nice trigger pull, nothing like Ruger's standard "Lawyer trigger."

This rifle consistently outshoots the .222 Remington T/C Contender Carbine that I traded for it, plus it is much cheaper to load for. I am one happy man, and I have not been a big fan of Ruger rifles in the past.

I hope you get as much satisfaction from your hornet as I have been getting.

Scott.
Hi NSA! Can you see how many fingers I am holding up?