![]() Some shots you can't take of course.īack to the upper level.the first shot often spooks most of them but my nephew outside is a great shot with his 870. The Quiet-22 (most readily available) passes right through them mostly so shot placement is key, shot angle to avoid ricochet, etc. I've used CB Longs and CCI "Quiet-22" down there as there are very few windows, and no tin roof of course. In the bottom level of the barn where the one farmer keeps his sheep over the winter, the pigeons will come down there in numbers for the warmth.and to find an easy meal. My go to is handloaded 357 shotshells with #12 shot out of my rossi trapper. ![]() Yep i know the work you refer to quite well. ![]() In my cz 452 the bullet stuck 3 inches from the muzzle. In his pistols it was about as audible as breaking a pencil in half. I tried some colbri ammo that a buddy of mine brought to shoot. It might, it might not.but I love 22s.I love trying new ammo types.so naturally it was on the "must try" list for me. I currently use an air rifle for this job. Knowing a missed shot won't punch through a barn roof would be comforting, so I'm eager to see if this stuff will work. One of my 22s is a 13" barrel Norinco JW-15A "Backpacker" and I use it to clear pigeons from barns belonging to friends. Now, I wouldn't bother with it unless I had a reason to try.and what I think is the right gun. Velocity so slow that there are reports of it getting stuck in some long-barreled 22s! Last week, I found some online and ordered it to try, it's supposed to arrive today. It's a 20gr, conical bullet propelled by the primer alone, velocity given is 500fps the muzzle. On a related note, about 4 months ago, I read about an Aguila 22 ammo called "Colibri". I haven't found them to be as consistent, or anywhere near as accurate as ammo in the 1050-1070fps range.but for plinking, close range shooting/pesting, teaching kids to shoot~it's great stuff. I've tried CCI CB Long, CCI CB Short, an CCI "Quiet-22" and Remington CBee 22. The longer the barrel/the quieter they will be. ![]() As other have stated, some are more quiet than others.but your barrel length plays a roll as well. I think what you're asking about is some of the subsonic ammos that are super-quiet, and on the slowest end of the spectrum.not just any subsonic rrect? If so, the quick answer is YES.they are substantially more quiet than ammo types in the 1050-1070 fps range, and WAY more quiet than high-velocity. My best bolt gun shoots 1 type of high velocity ammo well.but about 5 subsonic ammo types well.and I think I've tried nearly everything but match-grade stuff! Subsonic ammo is widely considered to be more accurate than supersonic/high-velocity ammo as a rule, and for the most part.that's been true in my own experience. One ammo type (CCI "Standard Velocity") is named for this, and no 's velocity is listed 1070fps. It's why most ammo falls just under the 1,100 fps range, or nicely over it. In terms of what you buy in stores.and how it's discussed in plain terms, subsonic ammo is often referred to as "standard velocity" and supersonic ammo is referred to as "high velocity". "Subsonic" (=slower than the speed of sound, or, less than about 1,100 fps) doesn't mean it's quiet, rather, it lacks the dible "crack" that high velocity (=supersonic) ammo has. So the powder charge itself may be the same or more than a 40 grainer which is moving faster.I think it's worth adding to the discussion that 22 ammo basically falls into 2 categories~subsonic, or supersonic. But the answer is not neccesarily "slower is better", because a 60 grain bullet may be going slow but it still takes a lot of powder to get that big 60 grainer moving. But different powder types burn at different rates as well, and it is possible that some bullet designs change the way the pressure is released at exit. Less powder charge is going to be the primary factor here. So, as long as your rounds are subsonic and you have a bolt buffer, the only area you can improve on is the barrel plosives. Bolt action rifles have very little of this besides the click of the firing pin as compared to a semi auto blowback like the 10/22. Action noise: The action cycling in a semi-auto. (if you use subsonics, you won't have this)ģ. Downrange sonic boom: the sound of the supersonic bullet tearing the air. This is the loudest source of noise unless you have a supressor.Ģ. Barrel Plosives (yes, that is a word): This is the hot gas escaping from the barrel as the bullet exits. All subsonic stuff is going to generate almost the exact same noise signature going down range.īasically, noise from a firearm comes from 3 sources:ġ. Click to expand.No, the only noise issue with speed is whether the bullet goes supersonic or not.
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