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#24 | |
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User
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 1,149
Thanks: 159
Thanked 664 Times in 318 Posts
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Quote:
Anyway, clean ammo will save you a lot of cleaning, especially in 22s. The cheap bulk pack will usually leave a lot of soot and grit in the gun, to the point that some of my guns will gunk up and malfunction after 50-100 rounds. After I installed a bull barrel in my 10/22, I found that the mag would jam after 30-40 rounds. I finally realized that the new barrel was leaving much more grit in the action (tight barrel, more back pressure, ejects before the grit blows out the muzzle...?), and a lot of this ended up in the mag. I had lotsa fun cleaning those 10/22 rotary mags, but (knock on wood) I haven't had any problems since I discovered the miracle of clean ammo. Dry lube helps too, all I usually do is to run some lead cleaner through it now and then (always cleaning from the chamber end), the rest can be removed with compressed air and a quick wide-down. The best bang for the buck IMO is Federal AutoMatch, with Blazer as a close second. These are pretty clean, and the accuracy is better than I can use, at least in a handgun. The 10/22 will shoot about 1 MOA at 100 yards with AutoMatch, could be better but definitely acceptable with relatively cheap ammo like that. BTW: I have drilled a hole in the rear of the receiver on the 10/22, this makes it possible to clean the barrel from the chamber end. It's a good way to preserve the barrels on these guns, and it makes me wonder why Ruger didn't make the receivers like that to begin with. |
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