I am considering purchasing either a heavy barrel .17 Hornet caliber rifle (Savage Model 25 Lightweight Varminter-T) or a heavy barrel .22LR rifle (Savage Model Mark II BVTS).
I am not a hunter. My goal is ultra-high-precision target shooting. My target distance is 50 feet and I want sub-millimeter to micro-meter accuracy.
The bullseye is just a dot the size of a period and the 9 ring is the size of a .22. A perfect shot is perfectly centered inside the 9 ring. My life goal is to have ten perfect shots on ten targets on one page.
I do already have everything I need to reload as I reload for my non-heavy barrel Savage .204 and my .223 AR-15. I really enjoy loading as it appeals to my sense of precision. I like being able to control every single grain of powder.
Factory loaded match grade .22LR has about 1000fps which does not induce too much energy into the barrel to cause barrel whip. But I would be dependent on the factory being truly match grade consitent from one round to the next, which irkes me.
Factory loaded .17 Hornet has about 3650fps which is way too fast / too much energy into the barrel for my intended purpose.
My question is, is it possible to low load a .17 hornet with the minimal amount of powder needed so as to only have about 1000fps, to have be about the same energy put into the barrel as a .22LR would induce?
And do you believe a low loaded .17 hornet would have the same accuracy as a factory loaded match grade .22LR round over the 50 foot target distance?
(I had originally purchased the .204 for this target challenge but found that I am fighting barrel whip with the amount of energy the powder charge puts into the barrel and it is not a heavy barrel making matters worse. It is great at 200 yards where my expectations for accuracy lesson to 1 to 2 inch groups)
So my idea now is to either purchase a new .22LR rifle and depend on factory loaded match grade ammo to be truly match grade or if it is possible go with the smallest caliber that I can load myself for which is the .17 hornet and low load it so it would only have about 1000fps, and be dependent on myself to be truly consistent for all rounds (which adds more skill to the challenge).
Thank you,
Marc
I am not a hunter. My goal is ultra-high-precision target shooting. My target distance is 50 feet and I want sub-millimeter to micro-meter accuracy.
The bullseye is just a dot the size of a period and the 9 ring is the size of a .22. A perfect shot is perfectly centered inside the 9 ring. My life goal is to have ten perfect shots on ten targets on one page.
I do already have everything I need to reload as I reload for my non-heavy barrel Savage .204 and my .223 AR-15. I really enjoy loading as it appeals to my sense of precision. I like being able to control every single grain of powder.
Factory loaded match grade .22LR has about 1000fps which does not induce too much energy into the barrel to cause barrel whip. But I would be dependent on the factory being truly match grade consitent from one round to the next, which irkes me.
Factory loaded .17 Hornet has about 3650fps which is way too fast / too much energy into the barrel for my intended purpose.
My question is, is it possible to low load a .17 hornet with the minimal amount of powder needed so as to only have about 1000fps, to have be about the same energy put into the barrel as a .22LR would induce?
And do you believe a low loaded .17 hornet would have the same accuracy as a factory loaded match grade .22LR round over the 50 foot target distance?
(I had originally purchased the .204 for this target challenge but found that I am fighting barrel whip with the amount of energy the powder charge puts into the barrel and it is not a heavy barrel making matters worse. It is great at 200 yards where my expectations for accuracy lesson to 1 to 2 inch groups)
So my idea now is to either purchase a new .22LR rifle and depend on factory loaded match grade ammo to be truly match grade or if it is possible go with the smallest caliber that I can load myself for which is the .17 hornet and low load it so it would only have about 1000fps, and be dependent on myself to be truly consistent for all rounds (which adds more skill to the challenge).
Thank you,
Marc