CdnHotshot said:
22-250Remington cartridge is the most successful factory .224 varmint calibre ever developed.
222 Rem., 223 Rem., have also been very successful.
These are dependable cartridges in the realm of accuracy, versatility and assortment of factory rifle selection. LAPUA now manufactures brass for all three... more positive proof of confidence in the 22-250
Your post sounds like something copied from gun magazine advertisments...
"... cartridge is the most successful factory .224 varmint calibre ever developed."
Not true, not true - the 222 family has been the most successful varmint cartridges ever made. The .223 Remington has put the kibosh on more varmints than any other cartridge (regardless of bore size) in existence.
"LAPUA now manufactures brass for all three... more positive proof of confidence in the 22-250"
Norma makes outstanding brass for the .220 Swift, so is that, "... more positive proof of confidence in the .220 Swift."?
Where do you get this stuff - do you actually speak like this, or did you get it from a magazine advertisement?
This is a moot comment - Lapua started making brass a few years ago, the 22-250 has been around since 1937, and a factory cartridge since 1965... so why did it take so long for Lapua to make brass?? Are you saying that Lapua was not sure of whether the 22-250 would be popular until a few years ago?? It is a truly dumb comment.
Lapua is going to be making 221 Fireball brass very soon... tell us, what does that mean about the .221 Fireball???
The Swift has been a factory offering since 1935, and there are millions of them around.
The only disadvantage of the swift is the semi-rimmed case, which requires a little care when loading a magazine... other than that, the 220 Swift uses ~ 8% to 10% more powder, and produces 8% to 10% more energy, and has ~ 0% to 5% less barrel life, all other things being equal.
If the .220 Swift had been a rimless case, the 22-250 would have never been born.
As an interesting side note - the 22 Hornet is the only calibre to have ammunition on retail dealer shelves for several years, without a rifle being made...
... and the 22-250 is the only calibre to have a rifle on the retail dealer shelves for several years without ammunition being made.
Alberta Kid, you started off with a stupid statement about something you have no personal knowledge about - and you keep trying to save face. You cannot save face on this.
Whether the 22-250 is more "popular" is not an issue - people that shoot either calibre are handloaders. Varmint shooters often use calibres that a are not commercially available at all.
Picking a varmint caliber is not a popularity contest, it is a personal choice, not based on sales numbers.
You need to walk away from this, cuz you keep digging yourself in deeper and deeper - by now, it is obvious to everyone that you don't own (and have no experience with) either a 22-250, or a .220 Swift.
Stop reading gun magazines and go get a rifle and shoot it.