Some time ago I was shopping for a really good .22lr. My conclusion was that the ruger 10 round magazine is absolutely the best capacity, most reliable feeding magazine choice. My second conclusion is I just don't like semi-auto 22lrs. Loads of complaints about failure to cycle with certain ammo when suppressed, they are noisy mechanically due to the autoloading nature of them.
So I set off to find a unicorn. A vintage, new in box, stainless all-weather 77/22 bolt action with the xytel boat paddle stock. That's about as good of a shooting iron for rough work as I could find.
I ended up getting one, I think I paid around $1400 for it which wasn't bad considering they started at $650 in the 1990s and ended up at a $1000 MSRP years ago.
Next step, the factory trigger is terrible, but timney has a drop in spring kit that made it just wonderful for $50.
A 4x fixed leupold scope was a great addition for reasonable money.
Tactical Solutions makes a wonderful suppressor compatible barrel that is now on clearance for $170. They are 16.5" overall length and fit in factory stocks, but the barrel is only 12" and the "cage" for the suppressor brings it to legal minimum rifle length. With all of the CCI branded ammo, they use a pistol powder that achieves about 90% of potential velocity in the first 12 inches so not a lot is lost.
Added a Banish 22 suppressor to it and its whisper quiet. We've been using it a lot lately to get rid of nuisance wildlife while we protect our deer, turkey, and food plots. Because we have a small amount of acreage, we need to ensure killing pests doesn't disturb the desirable wildlife that may be only a hundred yards away. It works well.
That concludes the story from other posts I put on this forum about 18 months ago.
Ruger all-weather stainless: $1400
Timney trigger spring: $50
Ruger offset stainless rings: $40
Tactical solutions barrel: $170
Leupold 4x scope: $150
M1 leather sling: $40
Banish 22 Suppressor: $650
All-in, $2500 for a reliable, totally quiet land management gun that doesn't spook the wildlife away.
So I set off to find a unicorn. A vintage, new in box, stainless all-weather 77/22 bolt action with the xytel boat paddle stock. That's about as good of a shooting iron for rough work as I could find.
I ended up getting one, I think I paid around $1400 for it which wasn't bad considering they started at $650 in the 1990s and ended up at a $1000 MSRP years ago.
Next step, the factory trigger is terrible, but timney has a drop in spring kit that made it just wonderful for $50.
A 4x fixed leupold scope was a great addition for reasonable money.
Tactical Solutions makes a wonderful suppressor compatible barrel that is now on clearance for $170. They are 16.5" overall length and fit in factory stocks, but the barrel is only 12" and the "cage" for the suppressor brings it to legal minimum rifle length. With all of the CCI branded ammo, they use a pistol powder that achieves about 90% of potential velocity in the first 12 inches so not a lot is lost.
Added a Banish 22 suppressor to it and its whisper quiet. We've been using it a lot lately to get rid of nuisance wildlife while we protect our deer, turkey, and food plots. Because we have a small amount of acreage, we need to ensure killing pests doesn't disturb the desirable wildlife that may be only a hundred yards away. It works well.
That concludes the story from other posts I put on this forum about 18 months ago.
Ruger all-weather stainless: $1400
Timney trigger spring: $50
Ruger offset stainless rings: $40
Tactical solutions barrel: $170
Leupold 4x scope: $150
M1 leather sling: $40
Banish 22 Suppressor: $650
All-in, $2500 for a reliable, totally quiet land management gun that doesn't spook the wildlife away.