mauserhunter
AH enthusiast
Yeah that's what I thought, a really good 22 set up can have fun at 300 but 400-600 is more of a hope and pray to hit.Is there a typo in there? Am I missing something?
Like Inline6, I have shot the .22 a fair amount in my life, and I have shot, and still shoot, steel out to 1,000 meters (measured), albeit with a .300 Win, and I find this statement hard to believe...
Here is what a 12" plate looks at 600 meters through a 24x scope. Hint, go down 4 MILs to find it:
View attachment 593664
Here is what a 12" plate looks at 600 meters, with naked eyes. See it?
View attachment 593665
Can't see it? OK, I will help...
View attachment 593666
Now, admittedly, 600 meters is 656 yards, and a 9"x16" piece of steel is 4" taller than a 12" steel plate, but, like CoElkHunter, I find it difficult to believe that one can SEE a 9"x16" piece of steel at 600 yards...
As to "ring(ing) 9”x16” piece of steel every shot at 600 yards with an iron sighted cz452 22 lr on a calm day", well, all I can say is that even the .300 Win shooting 180 gr match bullets requires 4.4 MILs of vertical correction, to compensate for its 104" drop (104" = 8.6 feet, mind you!). I cannot even begin to think what the drop of the .22 is at 600 yards...
Not to mention that this day better be "calm" indeed, as in 'no atmosphere calm' because it only takes a whisper to start requiring drift correction at 600 meters even with the .300 / 180 gr, so I cannot even begin to think what the .22 / 40 gr will drift at that distance even on a zero-wind day, if such a thing ever existed.
Like Bob Nelson 35Whelen, I am amazed at what modern CNC machining can do to a barrel, and the CZ 452 is a great rifle, but put it all together, to get to 1) ringing the 9"x16" steel every shot + 2) at 600 yards + 3) with iron sighs +4) with a .22 LR, and I guess that maybe I too need shooting lessons from you, likely after an extended session at a good optometrist