




jezzab wrote:I ordered a LH Miroku MK10 Deluxe Sporter and went to pick it up and they had ordered me a Trap instead because there was no stock. As expected it didn't fit and was an 1" high. Anyway, I have to wait until June
Since I had a ripe Cat A PTA there that would be wasted, I had a 17HMR hole in my life and thought I'd get an LA101 a go.(only have one other Aussie rifle) Went home with a nice little black barrel thing with a walnut stock
Sighted in and that night shot my first hare from 98m (I set this one up with a thermal). It did something I haven't seen before with my 22LR and .25 PCP, and did two casual hops to the right (I thought I'd missed) and then flipped over and did the usual leg shake.
Next day I double check my zero and it was spot on.
Next night I shoot another one and it bolts to the right 3m and stands upright (102m distance). Figured I must have missed which was strange from fence post. And these were body shots, not head shots. I'm no pro shooter but I can group 100m pretty well and have put 1000s of rounds through the 22LR and PCP
I decided to shoot again and it's down on its feet again and this is where is gets weird - If you have missed with a thermal before (and you have it to White Hot) you will see a black puff which is dirt of the miss and you re-adjust if needed. This had multiple 'puffs' around and behind it and then it dropped dead. There was no White though (hot blood) but maybe the bloody fragments went straight into the dirt
I love this thing but it intrigues me







bigrich wrote:personally i like the 22mag , or if reloading 22 hornet for that type of use . all the OP can do is try different ammo with a heavier , stouter projectile i suppose

Billo wrote:bigrich wrote:personally i like the 22mag , or if reloading 22 hornet for that type of use . all the OP can do is try different ammo with a heavier , stouter projectile i suppose
The Hornet can do it all, had a HMR and the 17 WSM and both have a place but also limitation
The Hornet with the right projectile is a handy all-rounder and quiet, something that many over look

fnq22 wrote:Billo wrote:bigrich wrote:personally i like the 22mag , or if reloading 22 hornet for that type of use . all the OP can do is try different ammo with a heavier , stouter projectile i suppose
The Hornet can do it all, had a HMR and the 17 WSM and both have a place but also limitation
The Hornet with the right projectile is a handy all-rounder and quiet, something that many over look
Hardly fair to compare a rimfire to a centrefire dont you think..?
As most mention 17 HMR has its limitations but used within those limitations (small critters and crows out to 200 metres or so ) its great..i also have a hornet and bigger centrefire stuff as well that I rarely use anymore...
The best reason to own a .17 is that when you are bouncing around on a ute in the dark and shooting hares or the occassional fox you dont have to worry about trying to catch your ejected shells to reload...the other nice thing is the low noise factor....we mainly would use the .222 sako handloaded for fox shooting back in the day that the skins were worth money and till last year none of us ever owned or wore ear protection...and when you shoot out the window of a ute or even over the cab the sound can revebrerate quite a bit..the .17 is a very pleasant round to shoot..
I dont understand the hate for it if you can accept and work within the limitations..and perhaps some folk just like a larger calibre with more hitting power because they are a crap shot and find it difficult to judge distances or consistently hit the vital areas..


NTSOG wrote:Wapiti: "Both foxes ran off, obviously to die later in circumstances that I find abhorrent. There's no way that would've happened with the 22 Mag."
I'm using Hornady V-max 30 gr. in my HW60P .22 magnum and have recently had two foxes run off after shots that clearly penetrated the heart-lung zone at ranges of 65 and 85 yards. One went 15 yards, the other about 95 before dropping. Because of that now I tend to wait for a chance to shoot from chest to rear or rear to chest so the bullet can cause as much damage down the length of the body of the fox as possible, The same with hares. It seems the little 30 gr bullets don't have the shock effect to stun the blighters.
Jim



NTSOG wrote:Wapiti: "Both foxes ran off, obviously to die later in circumstances that I find abhorrent. There's no way that would've happened with the 22 Mag."
I'm using Hornady V-max 30 gr. in my HW60P .22 magnum and have recently had two foxes run off after shots that clearly penetrated the heart-lung zone at ranges of 65 and 85 yards. One went 15 yards, the other about 95 before dropping. Because of that now I tend to wait for a chance to shoot from chest to rear or rear to chest so the bullet can cause as much damage down the length of the body of the fox as possible, The same with hares. It seems the little 30 gr bullets don't have the shock effect to stun the blighters.
Jim


jezzab wrote:How old is your ammo? Or the gun shops stock. I did some research on this a couple of months ago when I bought mine and the results were that this issue was resolved? ie split necks on unfired ammo. I bought a brick with mine and checked them all (Hornady) not one split (thankfully)

NTSOG wrote:G'day,
I have the impression that 30gr. V-max in .22 Magnum results in more pass-through shots. [I have often seen a spray of dirt on the ground on the side away from me of a fox or hare where the bullet hit the ground.] I gather from what bigrich stated that slightly slower 40 gr. hollow points 'dump' their energy into the target animal rather than passing through which is what the lighter and faster 30 gr. V-max are tending to do.
Jim


NTSOG wrote:G'day,
I have the impression that 30gr. V-max in .22 Magnum results in more pass-through shots. [I have often seen a spray of dirt on the ground on the side away from me of a fox or hare where the bullet hit the ground.] I gather from what bigrich stated that slightly slower 40 gr. hollow points 'dump' their energy into the target animal rather than passing through which is what the lighter and faster 30 gr. V-max are tending to do.
Jim


bigpete wrote:Have had a 22wmr and a 17hmr and 2 22lr rifles and the 17hmr was the one I used the most for pest control. Never had the problems described here


bigrich wrote:bigpete wrote:Have had a 22wmr and a 17hmr and 2 22lr rifles and the 17hmr was the one I used the most for pest control. Never had the problems described here
what pests were you culling , and what ammo were you using pete ? i've seen winchester ammo split a lot of cases , saw a ruger 17hmr have a epic fail at belmont range one day . blew the mag out of the bottom of the rifle ! i'm a little sceptical of the 17hmr myself

bigpete wrote:bigrich wrote:bigpete wrote:Have had a 22wmr and a 17hmr and 2 22lr rifles and the 17hmr was the one I used the most for pest control. Never had the problems described here
what pests were you culling , and what ammo were you using pete ? i've seen winchester ammo split a lot of cases , saw a ruger 17hmr have a epic fail at belmont range one day . blew the mag out of the bottom of the rifle ! i'm a little sceptical of the 17hmr myself
Hares,foxes, rabbits. All with CCI 20gn game points
