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22-250ai twist?

I'm putting together a rifle for my youngest to start shooting a little longer range. I picked up a 1-8 from Krieger earlier this summer. I already have dies from the 22-250ai that I built my older some for his first barrel. I snagged a reamer from here. Also stumbled upon some 90vlds. I had originally planned on him shooting the 80vlds like I use in the 223ai but the 90s would help with the hit percentage I figure.

Now to the question. How many on here have been able to get the 90s to shoot in a 1-8 out of something like a 22-250ai? Should I get a 1-7 and risk blowing them up at these speeds?
 
I personally feel that, IF I needed to shoot anything bigger than, an 80 grain Bullet ( in a .223 to .22-250 AI, cartridge size ) I would be building, a 6XC, 6 creed. or 6x47 Lap. and would jump up, to the 95-107 grain "class" of Bullets and suck up, the extra recoil ! The 75 to 80 grain Berger VLD's, Sierra SMK's/ TMK's and ELD-M's are about the "perfect" size for the 1-8 twist,. so WHY try, to "reinvent the Wheel",.. (PIA to try to get the 90's, to "work" from all that, I've read) Again,..just MY, opinion !
 
He's a 52lb 6 year old. There's only so much recoil he'll "suck up" until it's not fun for him anymore. I don't think shooting the 90s is reinventing the wheel. There are plenty of people that shoot them just fine. I also know that the 80 can be very accurate and effective.

I'm looking for guys that have 22-250ai rifles (or something similar) and have shot 90s though to see what their first hand experience thoughts are.
 
I had a .22-250 with a 8” twist Brux. It would not shoot the 90’s...grouped like a shotgun. I could be wrong but I doubt the extra speed of the AI will cure the lack of stability from not enough twist.
 
I can’t speak to the 90gr but I had a 22-250 ai 1-8” Shilen that shot 80gr smk and 80gr eld match bullets like a laser beam. I just built a 22 creedmoor to replace the 22–250ai which should be a ballistic twin without the need to fireform brass. I ordered 500 of the new 88gr eld match bullets which I hope will shoot well in the 1-8” barrel.
 
Mine is 1-8 and I actually shoot the 70 RDF as it gives good velocity ballistics and is cheap. I'd keep your barrel and shoot 70-80s if it were me. Good luck.
Check out RL26 with it.
 
Ok, here is a main concern for you, freebore required for a 75, 80, and 88g is all different. If you throat it for a 90, then it won't be long before the 80's will be inaccurate. 6.5-7 twist is best for the 90g, but the 88's I believe were made for an 7 twist.

So, Geno, you need to be more specific in what your son will be using this rifle for.

Gunsmith, Alex Wheeler, on this site can help you out, he shoots a 22/250 AI with 75's on Montana Coyotes.
 
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He will most likely be just shooting steel and paper casually. No long strings of fire.

I guess my biggest concern i guess is whether the 7 twist is going to blow up any of these bullets at 22-250ai speeds.
 
He will most likely be just shooting steel and paper casually. No long strings of fire.

I guess my biggest concern i guess is whether the 7 twist is going to blow up any of these bullets at 22-250ai speeds.

Depends on throat maintenance, shooting conditions, and how long the strings of fire are. I would go 7” twist in a 5R/5C land configuration.
I’ve used several Broughton 5C barrels in fast twists shooting high MV’s and I’ve never had a bullet failure. On the other hand I’ve had several bullet blow ups in Krieger and Brux 4 groove barrels.
 
He will most likely be just shooting steel and paper casually. No long strings of fire.

I guess my biggest concern i guess is whether the 7 twist is going to blow up any of these bullets at 22-250ai speeds.

I'd recommend Hornady 75 gr BTHPs. They're the highest BC bullet I know of for mag-length use. They only need 1:9 to stabilize, but you'll get a bit better BC from your 1:8. I push them at 2930 fps in my .223 spacegun with a 28" 1:7 barrel (optimum for the 75 gr A-max). Heavier bullets have only marginally better ballistics, so I stay with what has worked well for me; heavier bullets may have a higher BC, but they are a lot slower at sane pressures; that makes their performance out to 1000 yards very similar (the heavies will have a higher trajectory).
 
I'd recommend Hornady 75 gr BTHPs. They're the highest BC bullet I know of for mag-length use. They only need 1:9 to stabilize, but you'll get a bit better BC from your 1:8. I push them at 2930 fps in my .223 spacegun with a 28" 1:7 barrel (optimum for the 75 gr A-max). Heavier bullets have only marginally better ballistics, so I stay with what has worked well for me; heavier bullets may have a higher BC, but they are a lot slower at sane pressures; that makes their performance out to 1000 yards very similar (the heavies will have a higher trajectory).
A 22-250 in an AI mag, dont have to worry about it fitting in a mag. And there is plenty of capacity to push the heaviest 224cal bullets. 80vld will probably me the lightest that will he used in this barrel
 
My 22-250 AI is 1-8. I shoot 75-77 gr. bullets. Tried to go into the 80's and it sprayed.

My guess is stay in the mid-high 70 gr. area and you will be fine.
 
I put a 1-7.5tw PacNor 4grv bbl on a M70 Stealth in 223 several years ago, and found that it would shoot marginally well with JLK 90s out to 600yds (farthest I tried it at the time). I was surprised, since we'd all been running 1-6.5tw bbls on our AR15 service rifles with the 90s. By "marginally well" I mean it would hold 1 MOA, which didn't compare that well to how well my best AR SR upper shot with those bullets. OTOH, I've had a 1-7tw Krieger on a 223AI that shot several 1/2 MOA groups at 1000yds with Berger & JLK 90VLDs. And I had one Krieger 1-6.5tw AR MR bbl that blew up nearly every type bullet I shot through it after it reached the ripe old age of 600rds...Krieger replaced it, no questions asked, with a 1-7.7tw bbl that's still shooting great after 1800+rds.

More to the point of the OP's question - all the 22-250AI bbls I've done for customers were 1-9tw. They'd do a great job with Hornady 75AMax bullets at 3400fps, but weren't any good for any of the 80s that my customers tried out of them. Not sure how well a 22CM or 22-250AI would handle the 90s with a 1-7.5tw bbl, but that's probably what I'd try first, based on my experience with that 1-7.5tw in 223 mentioned above. Even if it won't shoot Berger, JLK, or Sierra 90s worth a hoot, it should still handle 80s very well.
 
We settled on 80amax in this one. He was on fire his first time out shooting past 200 with it. Hit with the cold bore and went 5 for 5 at 488; 5 for 7 at 565 and 7 out of 9 at 705
 
I’ve shot the 80.5 Berger a hell of a long ways with precision, and it is very huntable- unlike the 90s.
 
Im not a fan of heavy bullets in a 22-250 or ai.

14 twist for 52gr area
12 twist for 60-68gr area

I agree with a post above, if you want that heavier boolit go 6mm to play in the 90 to 105 gr boolit area.
 

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