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Legacy Member
I hunt with my 10/22 Takedown LITE with a suppressor using sub sonic ammo exclusively with no problem. I have tried over a dozen different flavors of sub sonic .22LR ammo and the ones that I have consistently good performance are listed below:
- Remington SUBSONIC 40 grain hollow point
- CCI SUPPRESSOR 45 grain hollow point
- Fiocchi 40LHP subsonic 40 grain hollow point
- Gemtech Silencer Subsonic 42 grain round nose.
I tend to like the CCI SUPPRESSOR 45 grain hollow point the best.
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07-04-2018 02:56 PM
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Contributing Member
CCI Suppressor, will certainly give them a go, thanks for that, and the main reason for the thread.
How much for the Daniel Boone hats, or am I that old I am the only one who remembers him on TV 
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Happy with these for killing paper
If I may add,
4 or 5 years ago I got involved with the youth small bore team (.22 are most popular) at my rifle club.
A few years before that I was searching for a target round that would be reliable for my assortment of .22's. A Ruger 10-22 among them. Also to include Semi pistols.
For any of the Semi-Auto's, no matter if box mag or tube fed they were most consistent when using the Geco .22 long rifle boxed and marked for Semi-Auto.
I introduced these to the Youth Semi shooters with very good results.
They worked just as reliably in the Bolt actions and pump rifles they had brought.... as long as they were chambered for longs.
I had researched these a little and I believe they came about and were marketed to the new AR15 in .22 long shooters...... But that's just me guessing
Geco offers 2 styles, both are 40 Grn lead round nose. They are offered up for Bolt actions and for Semi's....... Usually at the same price.
Specs for:
Geco Bolt Actions: 40 Grn Lead round nose. 1083 FPS. On sale about $33 per 500
Geco Semi Auto: 40 Grn Lead round nose. 1148 FPS. On sale about $33 per 500
To add.. all casing from the box have the feel of a light lube on them. They are accurate and burn clean, making for a easy final clean.
When ordering I now buy 2 boxes of 5,000 count for about $290.00 per 5k.
I recently bought a 300 count box of CCI 40 Grn copper plated round nose (CPRN) they call AR Tactical @1200 FPS @ about $28.00 and had the kids try them out, but ran in to jamming/feeding problems from some who normally have no issues.
I'll keep trying other brands, but for now am happy with the results we are seeing from the Geco 1148 FPS Semi's are giving us.
Just my experience so far,
Charlie-Painter777
A Country Has No Greater Responsibility Than To Care For Those Who Served...
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Originally Posted by
Gil Boyd
Daniel Boone hats, or am I that old I am the only one who remembers him on TV
I often missed it............ While watching Rifleman !!
Charlie-Painter777
A Country Has No Greater Responsibility Than To Care For Those Who Served...
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Legacy Member
If you want a semi-auto .22 rifle, I would suggest looking into a Remington 550 rifle. It uses a Williams (of M1
Carbine fame) floating chamber and will reliably cycle subsonic, supersonic, short, long and long rifle .22 ammo. The only thing it will not cycle is .22 CB cartridges.
It is a tube fed semi-auto though, but when you can fit about 25 short cartridges you won't run out of ammo very quick.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Gil Boyd
Daniel Boone hats
I remember him well, Fess Parker...
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Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
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Contributing Member
Charlie,
$33 for 500...........I am definitely in the wrong country. That is cheap.
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Gil Boyd
$33 for 500
Ours is about double that mostly...and if you want Eley, maybe $100CDN. But it's REALLY good stuff...
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Legacy Member
CCI loads at least two different sub sonic loads. One at 980 fps and one at 715 fps. Needs to say the 715 fps will not operate a semi-auto. But in my Hi-Standard pistol the 980fps works fine.
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Legacy Member
A semi-auto .22 with a "muffler" will probably function more reliably with sub-sonics than one with a plain barrel, assuming no fancy gas--bleed porting in the barrel to reduce velocity.
Simple test for those with such goodies:
Test ammo for function with the can fitted and removed: Sub-sonics run at VERY low pressure and thus, expanding minimally, offer little or no resistance to extraction under that generated. If there is enough pressure to push the comparatively heavier bullet out of the muzzle, there is enough pressure to start the case moving backwards. A muffler may well extend the dwell-time of this gas pressure just enough to ensure complete extraction and ejection. The only "noise" will be the sound of the bolt / breech-block "clacking" as it chambers the next round.
Barrel length is important, as well. With HV .22 ammo, all of the propellant has reached maximum gas expansion in 16-18 inches of barrel; after that it is "coasting" / slowing down. "Mini-mags", "target" ammo and other exotica will vary that somewhat. If the bullet is supersonic at the muzzle, NO silencer will get rid of that supersonic "CRACK", it will just reduce the muzzle blast. This definitely applies to serious centre-fire systems. However, in "service" conditions, if the "target" only hears the supersonic "Crack", it is VERY difficult to locate the firers direction AND distance.
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