Wapiti wrote:Hi people,
Just wondering,
What sort of game you all see as suitable for the 17HMR for all you owners out there?
What's your favourite brand or type of rifle, and why?
Do you have a particular brand or type of ammo that you use and what do you reckon it's best for?
It seems like this cartridge, made from the 22 mag case, might even have surpassed the popularity of it's parent, for what reason do you reckon?
Keen for your thoughts.
bigrich wrote:IMHO the 22 mag is more flexible, 30gn to 50gn projectiles. Ballistic tips, hollow points and FMJ and sub sonic rounds. Makes it suitable for a wider variety of game than the 17hmr, especially if you want to eat rabbits. 17hmr is good at blowing stuff up. 22 mag accuracy is very so-so compared to the 17hmr. From what I’ve been told accuracy drops of in the 17 after about 40 shots and it’s easy to bend a 17 cleaning rod . Hope this helps, cheers
Wapiti wrote:My two 17HMR's. One is a 77/17 SS Varmint, the other is a Ruger American SS. I'm extremely happy with how both perform, although I haven't bothered to chrony the difference between the short and long barrels, because at all ranges I use a 17, there doesn't ever seem to be a practical difference.
Die Judicii wrote:I purchased a CZ 453 17HMR with the factory set trigger about 10 years ago.
Walnut stock and put a Zeiss Conquest on it.
Using it without the aid of the set trigger I hated it and felt like ditching it.
But,,,,,,, WITH the set trigger it transformed and became one of my favoured go to rifle for small stuff.
Overall, its a lovely little rifle to carry and shoot with consistent accuracy.
At the height of the drought I used it every afternoon to dispatch roos and wallabies that were at deaths door and could hardly get up under the weight of
massive ticks the size of marbles.
Brain shots never failed an instant death for these poor creatures
It prefers a diet of Hornady 17gr V Max over other offerings including the HP variety.
Since then I also purchased a Ruger 77 .17 WSM Stainless/Walnut and put a Zeiss illuminated Duralyt on it.
Havnt used it all that much,,,,, but it performs like an HMR on steroids.
If you look at the reviews on this cartridge they mention 3 or 5 shot groups that have an occasional flier.
My findings are the same, and it's rather annoying,, but not bad enough to cause a complete miss.
Die Judicii wrote:I purchased a CZ 453 17HMR with the factory set trigger about 10 years ago.
Walnut stock and put a Zeiss Conquest on it.
Using it without the aid of the set trigger I hated it and felt like ditching it.
But,,,,,,, WITH the set trigger it transformed and became one of my favoured go to rifle for small stuff.
Overall, its a lovely little rifle to carry and shoot with consistent accuracy.
At the height of the drought I used it every afternoon to dispatch roos and wallabies that were at deaths door and could hardly get up under the weight of
massive ticks the size of marbles.
Brain shots never failed an instant death for these poor creatures
It prefers a diet of Hornady 17gr V Max over other offerings including the HP variety.
Since then I also purchased a Ruger 77 .17 WSM Stainless/Walnut and put a Zeiss illuminated Duralyt on it.
Havnt used it all that much,,,,, but it performs like an HMR on steroids.
If you look at the reviews on this cartridge they mention 3 or 5 shot groups that have an occasional flier.
My findings are the same, and it's rather annoying,, but not bad enough to cause a complete miss.
deye243 wrote:Die Judicii wrote:I purchased a CZ 453 17HMR with the factory set trigger about 10 years ago.
Walnut stock and put a Zeiss Conquest on it.
Using it without the aid of the set trigger I hated it and felt like ditching it.
But,,,,,,, WITH the set trigger it transformed and became one of my favoured go to rifle for small stuff.
Overall, its a lovely little rifle to carry and shoot with consistent accuracy.
At the height of the drought I used it every afternoon to dispatch roos and wallabies that were at deaths door and could hardly get up under the weight of
massive ticks the size of marbles.
Brain shots never failed an instant death for these poor creatures
It prefers a diet of Hornady 17gr V Max over other offerings including the HP variety.
Since then I also purchased a Ruger 77 .17 WSM Stainless/Walnut and put a Zeiss illuminated Duralyt on it.
Havnt used it all that much,,,,, but it performs like an HMR on steroids.
If you look at the reviews on this cartridge they mention 3 or 5 shot groups that have an occasional flier.
My findings are the same, and it's rather annoying,, but not bad enough to cause a complete miss.
So you can shoot roos in qld with a hmr ...... I wish . in Vic. 204r min with a 40g pill .
What a joke .
bigpete wrote:Not according to the rules
bigrich wrote:
i've read some great things about the 17WSM , ammo supply a concern ? now a interesting idea would be a 22WSM ! probably fills a hole that doesn't need filling . i'd like to think of a 22wsm as a rimfire 22hornet that you don't have to load for . just a idea .....
bladeracer wrote:bigpete wrote:Not according to the rules
Schedule 1, Part C allows use of even .22LR for euthanising kangaroos.
bigrich wrote:Wapiti wrote:My two 17HMR's. One is a 77/17 SS Varmint, the other is a Ruger American SS. I'm extremely happy with how both perform, although I haven't bothered to chrony the difference between the short and long barrels, because at all ranges I use a 17, there doesn't ever seem to be a practical difference.
how do you find the ruger rifles ? i've read a lot of negative stuff about the 77 series to do with head spacing because of the two piece bolt . i've heard lots of good stuff about the ruger american however . what game and circumstance are you using your 17hmr in ?
cheers
bladeracer wrote:bigpete wrote:Not according to the rules
Schedule 1, Part C allows use of even .22LR for euthanising kangaroos.
Die Judicii wrote:bladeracer wrote:bigpete wrote:Not according to the rules
Schedule 1, Part C allows use of even .22LR for euthanising kangaroos.
Thanks for that Blade
bigpete wrote:bladeracer wrote:bigpete wrote:Not according to the rules
Schedule 1, Part C allows use of even .22LR for euthanising kangaroos.
Yeah as usual didn't read the post properly. I took is as meaning for harvest or culling.
Die Judicii wrote:bigpete wrote:bladeracer wrote:bigpete wrote:Not according to the rules
Schedule 1, Part C allows use of even .22LR for euthanising kangaroos.
Yeah as usual didn't read the post properly. I took is as meaning for harvest or culling.
That's alright BP,,,,,, I reckon you'd have to be rabid and frothing at the gills if anyone was to have been "harvesting" the ones I was talking about.
They were skin and bone,,,, covered all over with massive ticks,,,, and didn't have the strength to get up and hop away when approached.
I'd just drive the fence lines every afternoon toward the end of the drought and see them laying in the shade of trees and bushes.
As for the greens saying the roos and wallabies are "threatened" I wish some of em were with me to witness just how many there are, because the very next day there were just as many again in the same situation needing euthanising. Day after day after day,,,,,,,
When the drought broke, and the grasses and bushes re emerged,,,,,,,,,,, there were and still are plenty of roos and wallabies.
The drought surely must have thinned them to a certain degree,,,,, but there numbers bounce back quickly.
bigrich wrote:how do you find the ruger rifles ? i've read a lot of negative stuff about the 77 series to do with head spacing because of the two piece bolt . i've heard lots of good stuff about the ruger american however . what game and circumstance are you using your 17hmr in ?
cheers