Vince24 wrote:Hi guys
At some stage I would like to add one 22LR level action (just 1!) to my collection of service rifles, for recreational shooting, from 50 to 100m.
I would like to get your opinions on the following models, as regards fluidity and accuracy and other matters relevant to shooting:
- Browning BL22
- Erma EG71
- Miroku ML22
- Henry H001
- Rossi Rio Bravo
- Chiappa LA322
Appreciate any insight you may have from owning or shooting one of the above!
The winchester 9422 is not there on purpose. Same for the Norinco JW21, Marlin 39A.
But open to other models I have not listed above.
Cheers !!
Vince
Of those, I have the Henry (and the Norinco, my neighbour has a 9422M), and a mate has the same model Henry. I know somebody with the Browning and it seems like a nice rifle but I haven't tried it myself. I had thousands of rounds through the Norinco when it broke (lifter system is weak) and I switched to the Henry, which has also had thousands through it. I still think the Norinco is the better rifle but the Henry has been pretty flawless for me. The Henry feed system is significantly more robust than the Norinco/Winchester setup. It has some minor issues, the wood is not fitted very neatly and the zinc receiver cover paint chips off very easily. But it's very reliable, and easy to strip for cleaning (but don't do it in the field as there are little parts that will hide in the grass). Running the lever slowly will cause feed issues but if you run it properly it'll likely run forever (neither rifle will feed truncated bullets). If I can ever find a 24" model Henry I'll grab it just for the added sight radius. I'd prefer the shorter Youth butt stock but don't want to buy a Youth model just for that.
Since January 2018 I've used the lever 22's for regular offhand iron-sight practice, on half-scale silhouettes from 40m to 100m. But the past few months a mate has been coming out to join me in weekly practice, so I've closed the distances right up while he gets the hang of shooting offhand. We've mainly been shooting steels from 15m to 45m, though I've been putting some out around 70m recently to try to extend the range. I'm getting bored with the close range stuff, but on Monday we put seven 120mm gongs up only about 8m away and just ran 15rd mags at speed back and forth across them, and had a blast. We also shoot some .38 and .357 with the .22's (and I took a 12ga. out this week, and a muzzleloader last week - it's all about having fun). I've fired 2165rds of the Cyclones since September 17th - except for 150rds they were all in the Henry. My empty .22 boxes add up to 7950rds since May 13th, but just under 1000rds was pistol shooting.
The Browning is a Cowboy Action practice rifle and gets run very fast, and I don't recall seeing it have any issues at all. Oh, actually, I have seen some light strikes in it, which I collected, brought home and they fired just fine in the Henry, so that might be an issue with the Browning or just a result of running it so fast. They were Remington Cyclones, but my mate and I have fired thousands of these in the last seven weeks and we've had exactly one dud round. I hit it eight times and it wouldn't fire. When I pulled the bullet a disc of priming compound dropped out with the powder, definitely a bad round. The priming compound detonated nicely when I lit the powder though.
My mate had the Erma years ago, which is why he bought the Henry now, I think the Erma is what Henry copied for the H001?
The Miroku and Browning are the same rifle as far as I'm aware.
I've never seen the Rossi or Chiappa, but the Rossi exploded diagram looks like a copy of the Henry H001? The Chiappa takedown design looks pretty interesting.
Another that comes to mind is the Ruger Model 96, which uses the rotary mags. Pakenham Firearms had a 96M earlier this year.
I forgot to address the "fluidity, accuracy and sights" of my rifles. I prefer the action of the Norinco over the Henry, it just feels a little better but I can't enumerate precisely how. The Norinco is also slightly more accurate but you have to shoot a lot of groups off the bench to measure a difference in them, once you've worked out which ammo they prefer. Due to a cataract I'm running Williams aperture sights on them, it just slides into the dovetail, but you will need to raise the front sight slightly to suit. I just used a screw the right height and filed it to a blade. My mate's Henry has the OEM sights and they work just fine.