All the 17s are good mate. Most things are when used in for the right setting.No issue with my .17 hornet love it.
All the 17s are good mate. Most things are when used in for the right setting.No issue with my .17 hornet love it.
I never forget being introduced to 17Rem.All the 17s are good mate. Most things are when used in for the right setting.
It is certainly a screamer. Different animal to the hmr or wsm that's for sure. The little rims are awesome for night shooting, been great replacements for the 22s from possums to wallabies.I never forget being introduced to 17Rem.
Finger nail groups. Magpies at 300yds.
Foxes at 300 yds. A running left to right fox at 300yds!
The only time it struggled was in gusty wind and rain. Brought it's range down that's all.
204?Cal. .17, a concept I never understood. .22 is as small as it needs to be.
I see more people having problems with micro calibers ((including .22) than not.
A .224 CF is where it starts if one wants to shoot at 100m or beyond. Anything smaller is play stuff and not worth the bother. Proof? This forum!
200metres if you're a confident shot.17hornet is very proficient past 100m.
Agreed. But when you think about it, it's really just a cop out by the manufacturers. A regular, full sized short action with a rimfire bolt would be relatively easy. Coming up with a magazine, while challenging, that would feed reliably, would make it a no brainer rifle to produce. They just don't want to do it. <shrug>17HMR was a success because the chamber pressure it produces can be handled without any re-design of existing 22 actions.
The 17WSM is a much higher pressure cartridge (IIRC it's based on .28 nail gun cartridge) and existing 22/17HMR designs can't safely handle the additional pressure.
The result was that virtually none of the major rifle manufacturers thought it cost effective to design and manufacture new actions for it.
Savage make a rifle for it and the popular consensus is that it an absolute dog of a rifle
Winchester and Ruger each make a single model of rifle for it, but they are very expensive.
If CZ, Tikka, Bergara etc had made rifles chambered for it, it could have survived and possible even thrived - but without the support of major rifle manufacturers it was always destined to become extinct
Cheers
Bruce
I guess I was unclear with my point. Yes, making a rimfire bolt would require new tooling (that's kind of a given). My point was once a rimfire bolt was designed, it would be rather easy to cover multiple rimfire cartridges. Say something along the lines of a Marlin rimfire bolt, where the firing pin floats in the bolt head, and the hammer strikes a driving rod, that then strikes the floating firing pin in the bolt head. There's nothing new here; it's been done that way for years in a lot of rimfire rifle designs; mainly to ease manufacturing.The two big challenges with a rimfire cartridge are
1) the rim makes it a little more difficult to get reliable feeding. It’s why Paul Mauser ditched the rim and developed rimless cartridges for his bolt action rifles in the 1880’s.
2) a rimfire is a once use cartridge that cannot be reloaded. Shooters don’t mind this with the 22lr as its pennies a shot, put up with it in 17 HMR, but any more is probably a big barrier.
Comments made about switching say the CZ527 or Howa Mini Mauser to 17 WSM. Big challenge is the firing pin and bolt face. A centrefire firing pin is easy to make, and the tooling will pretty much cover every calibre. With a rimfire you have an offset pin and striker hole on the boltface. This will require seperate tooling and manufacture.
If you compare the 17 WSM with next rung up the 17 ladder, the 17 Hornet, the later is a little faster, can be reloaded and can be produced in pretty much rifle that is chambered for 22 Hornet, 222, 223 etc.
What does surprise is that little cartridges like the 5.6x28 have not gained wider acceptance as a small rifle cartridge and been necked down to 17 or .20. Similar sorts of case capacity to the Hornet, but in a modern cartridge.
But then, what is the need?. An air rifle or 22lr fills the low power, closer range use, 17 HMR for in between and then 222 / 223 covers pretty much everything else. If you need long range on foxes or for bigger predators, small deer etc then the 22-250 or 243 fills that niche.
Why are you not getting Winchester ammo
Because no one is bringing it in?Why are you not getting Winchester ammo