.22LR 200 yard shooting
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.22LR 200 yard shooting
Who here shoots there 22 at 200 yards. My 39M shoots 2.5 inches high at 100 yards. Could not find my groups at 200. Didnt have enough paper to cover area out there. So how much does a 40gr RN 22 bullet drop going from 100 to 200 yards?
30/30 Winchester: Not accurate enough fer varmints, barely adequate for small deer; BUT In a 10" to 14" barrelled pistol; is good for moose/elk to 200 yards; ground squirrels to 300 metres
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I think the farthest we have shot 22s is 140 to 150 yards. Mainly because we don't normally have a range 200 yards long. But we do the 100 yard thing every time out.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Don't know the exact drop, but between 20 and 28 inches should put you on paper.
Bob Nisbet
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I know that there is a 5" drop at 100 yards with the Federal ammo I use.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
RANisbet wrote:Don't know the exact drop, but between 20 and 28 inches should put you on paper.
Bob Nisbet
That sounds about right.
When I had my little farm I used to take pot shots at crows and woodchucks at 2-300 yds with my .22 martini. I'd aim about 2' over and about 1' into the wind @200 an bag 'em. Was always impressed at the performance of the .22lr at those ranges.
When I really wanted to tag something I used my Sako / .222 rem out to about 400 yds. Beyond that the M14 came out.
I sure miss that place!
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
150 yards is the longest range I've got. I should shoot the .22s more...
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
26" with my Winchester Super X Power Point .40gr HP ammo. I had a Ruger 10/22T with the heavy stainless steel barrell and had a Basch & Laumb (sp?) 6 x 14 x 44 AO scope on it and was good for ground squirrels out to 200 yards with about a 26" hold over. And then of course you have to hold off for wind. Oh a really calm day I was good to go out to 250 yards for the little critters.
We have guys out at our range that are into some newfangled NRA Long Distance .22 LR Shooting Matches. They shoot at 200 yards and most of them use heavy barreled, single shot, rifles.
We have guys out at our range that are into some newfangled NRA Long Distance .22 LR Shooting Matches. They shoot at 200 yards and most of them use heavy barreled, single shot, rifles.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
3leggedturtle: I have not shot 200 yds w/ a .22 LR, but several years ago I knew 2-3 enthusiastic .22 Shooters who did.
If I recall, they first made 48" X 48" target backers to get rounds on the paper & made sight corrections from there. & I do believe that they shot w/ 'scopes. One Shooter did utilize iron sights, but I think he had a lower front sight as his rear sight would allow enough elevation for a .22 @ 200 yds. I can't recall if he had a rear barrel sight or a receiver sight.
Once on paper, their biggest bug-a-boo was the wind, esp. w/ some of the low velocity target rounds. & of course some of the high velocity ammunition was not that accurate @ 200yds.
& it seems to me that on days when there was too much of "breeze" --as they called it -- blowing for 200 yds., they would try .22 Shorts @ 75 or 100 yds.
If I recall, they first made 48" X 48" target backers to get rounds on the paper & made sight corrections from there. & I do believe that they shot w/ 'scopes. One Shooter did utilize iron sights, but I think he had a lower front sight as his rear sight would allow enough elevation for a .22 @ 200 yds. I can't recall if he had a rear barrel sight or a receiver sight.
Once on paper, their biggest bug-a-boo was the wind, esp. w/ some of the low velocity target rounds. & of course some of the high velocity ammunition was not that accurate @ 200yds.
& it seems to me that on days when there was too much of "breeze" --as they called it -- blowing for 200 yds., they would try .22 Shorts @ 75 or 100 yds.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Come up 18-22 minutes from your 100 meter zero, will be close, depends on your ammo , the wind, your scope and about 150 other factors. 

Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I have to put about 35+ minutes of elevation with the soule sight I have mounted on my Winchester lowall to reach to 270 yds. Most ammo will surprisingly hold about an 8 inch or smaller group at that distance.
Windage at that distance is another wildly changing variable.
Windage at that distance is another wildly changing variable.

Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
jnyork wrote:Come up 18-22 minutes from your 100 meter zero, will be close, depends on your ammo , the wind, your scope and about 150 other factors.
20 minutes IIRC is what I had to do using Match (standard velocity) ammo. You'd be surprised how much it drops from 100yds to just 100 m.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Hey there 3leggedturtle --
You got me curious again! Dug the Anschutz with the Super Target Spot out of the safe and thought I’d see what it be…
This last picture is what the target frame looks like at 200 yards. It is 24” wide and about 48” tall. The point of aim is a 3” x 3” Post-It with a 1” Shoot-N-C dot on it.
Put one shot on the dot at 50 yards as an indexing shot. Managed to get lucky and hit it with this rig!!
Put four shots in it’s general direction at 200 yards. One hit on paper. It’s accented with the blue arrow. The other three passed through the gap between the cardboard and frame base. There were no holes in the frame base and no scuffs in the dirt in front of the target frame.
Looks like about four feet of drop with these standard velocity bullets.
Hope this helps. Always looking for an excuse to pull a trigger… Wind
You got me curious again! Dug the Anschutz with the Super Target Spot out of the safe and thought I’d see what it be…
This last picture is what the target frame looks like at 200 yards. It is 24” wide and about 48” tall. The point of aim is a 3” x 3” Post-It with a 1” Shoot-N-C dot on it.
Put one shot on the dot at 50 yards as an indexing shot. Managed to get lucky and hit it with this rig!!
Put four shots in it’s general direction at 200 yards. One hit on paper. It’s accented with the blue arrow. The other three passed through the gap between the cardboard and frame base. There were no holes in the frame base and no scuffs in the dirt in front of the target frame.
Looks like about four feet of drop with these standard velocity bullets.
Hope this helps. Always looking for an excuse to pull a trigger… Wind
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Is that because the supersonics start to tumble around 100 yards as they go subsonic, vs. the subsonics not having that transition?Ray Newman wrote: ...of course some of the high velocity ammunition was not that accurate @ 200yds.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
There's a target out there?Wind wrote:This last picture is what the target frame looks like at 200 yards. It is 24” wide and about 48” tall. The point of aim is a 3” x 3” Post-It with a 1” Shoot-N-C dot on it.

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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I know where to hold with my rifle for long distances, but not the actual data. My Henry H001 will keep 'em in a gopher hole easy, out to 200 yards, maybe more.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
It has been almost a year since my shooting buddy Rolf passed away. A 6'10" lawyer! When he was still with us, we would regularly pick up a pizza, grab the rifles and go to the range with a thin sheeet metal gong of 12" diameter and set it up at 200 yards after work. We would shoot offhand most of the time. As he would get more tired from the progressing cancer the newly approved Olympic shooting positions-OCOT & BCOT were used. One cheek on tailgate/both cheeks on tailgate. It is absolutely amazing how good you can get at it. After a short time he was ringing that gong 21/25 times. We would shoot until it was too dark to see. Enjoying the pizza and the cool evening air and a few rounds of .22 lr ammo in midweek while the others guys went to the golf club.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
That sounds like an awful nice way to remember a friend.Hairy Clipper wrote:It has been almost a year since my shooting buddy Rolf passed away. A 6'10" lawyer! When he was still with us, we would regularly pick up a pizza, grab the rifles and go to the range with a thin sheeet metal gong of 12" diameter and set it up at 200 yards after work. We would shoot offhand most of the time. As he would get more tired from the progressing cancer the newly approved Olympic shooting positions-OCOT & BCOT were used. One cheek on tailgate/both cheeks on tailgate. It is absolutely amazing how good you can get at it. After a short time he was ringing that gong 21/25 times. We would shoot until it was too dark to see. Enjoying the pizza and the cool evening air and a few rounds of .22 lr ammo in midweek while the others guys went to the golf club.
Hairy
Hunter Ed. instructor
NRA Basic pistol Inst.
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Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 1
NRA Basic pistol Inst.
NRA Personal protection inst.
NRA Range safety officer
Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 1
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Formal competition with .22s at 200 yards used to be a very common event in the early part of the last century, including matches at Camp Perry. I have a wonderful old book printed in 1927 and written by E.C. Crossman that goes into great detail. This book, Small Bore Rifle Shooting, discusses target rifles, ammo, targets, sights, and ballistics. At this time, the shooters were just experimenting with smokeless powder for target shooting and found its accuracy to be a little suspect. They prefered 'Lesmoke,' a mixture of smokeless and black that was commonly loaded in the target ammo of the day.
Anyway, a detailed ballistic chart in the book shows the following trajectory for a gun SIGHTED IN at 200 yards:
50 yards: 18" High
100 yards: 25" High (trajectory peak)
150 yards: 19.5" high
200 yards: Zero
This was for ammo that we, today, would consider of target velocity (about 1040 - 1050 fps)
They also have a photo of a 3.3 inch 200 yard group shot from a machine rest. Winchester and Stevens, Savage (Model 1919 NRA model) bolt actions were beginning to dominate the game, but many shooters were shooting Winchester High Walls, Martinis, Stevens falling blocks, etc. Aperture sights ruled.
I inherited this book from my grandfather in the fifties when I was a kid. I have have read it cover to cover about 101 thousand times.
Anyway, a detailed ballistic chart in the book shows the following trajectory for a gun SIGHTED IN at 200 yards:
50 yards: 18" High
100 yards: 25" High (trajectory peak)
150 yards: 19.5" high
200 yards: Zero
This was for ammo that we, today, would consider of target velocity (about 1040 - 1050 fps)
They also have a photo of a 3.3 inch 200 yard group shot from a machine rest. Winchester and Stevens, Savage (Model 1919 NRA model) bolt actions were beginning to dominate the game, but many shooters were shooting Winchester High Walls, Martinis, Stevens falling blocks, etc. Aperture sights ruled.
I inherited this book from my grandfather in the fifties when I was a kid. I have have read it cover to cover about 101 thousand times.
Last edited by bhk on Wed Apr 15, 2009 10:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I once saw a guy kill a prairie dog at 250 paces with a .22 LR. I have to say I really didn't think a .22 LR would do it at that distance. Kill the pd, I mean. I don't remember which .22 load it was, sad to say.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I ran 22 IHMSA pistol matches a Glendale Shooting Club St Louis. Mo for a time in the 1980s.
I once set the extra targets on the big bore range out to 200 meters. There were lots of complaints about that being to fare away. I said it was an old sport they used to shoot standing. At the time I could hit an average seven of ten rams at 200 meters.
Laying on my back using the side of my leg as a brace I need 56 clicks elevation from my 100 yard setting on the Bomar sights. A spotter could see the shadow of the bullet base as it passed over or under the target.
Everyone that tried had a great time an got some hits on the rams. The were some great shooters in that sport. Not a windy day sport with the 22 though.
John
I once set the extra targets on the big bore range out to 200 meters. There were lots of complaints about that being to fare away. I said it was an old sport they used to shoot standing. At the time I could hit an average seven of ten rams at 200 meters.
Laying on my back using the side of my leg as a brace I need 56 clicks elevation from my 100 yard setting on the Bomar sights. A spotter could see the shadow of the bullet base as it passed over or under the target.
Everyone that tried had a great time an got some hits on the rams. The were some great shooters in that sport. Not a windy day sport with the 22 though.
John
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Amazon says "The Handbook on Small Bore Rifle Shhooting" is still available.
http://www.amazon.com/Handbook-Small-Bo ... 1432595628
http://www.amazon.com/Handbook-Small-Bo ... 1432595628
bhk wrote:Formal competition with .22s at 200 yards used to be a very common event in the early part of the last century, including matches at Camp Perry. I have a wonderful old book printed in 1927 and written by E.C. Crossman that goes into great detail. This book, Small Bore Rifle Shooting, discusses target rifles, ammo, targets, sights, and ballistics. At this time, the shooters were just experimenting with smokeless powder for target shooting and found its accuracy to be a little suspect. They prefered 'Lesmoke,' a mixture of smokeless and black that was commonly loaded in the target ammo of the day.
Anyway, a detailed ballistic chart in the book shows the following trajectory for a gun SIGHTED IN at 200 yards:
50 yards: 18" High
100 yards: 25" High (trajectory peak)
150 yards: 19.5" high
200 yards: Zero
This was for ammo that we, today, would consider of target velocity (about 1040 - 1050 fps)
They also have a photo of a 3.3 inch 200 yard group shot from a machine rest. Winchester and Stevens, Savage (Model 1919 NRA model) bolt actions were beginning to dominate the game, but many shooters were shooting Winchester High Walls, Martinis, Stevens falling blocks, etc. Aperture sights ruled.
I inherited this book from my grandfather in the fifties when I was a kid. I have have read it cover to cover about 101 thousand times.
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I do remember a few years ago at the SHOT show I was looking around at some French gun maker's wares. I can't remember the name of them now, but one of the things they had was a semi automatic .22 auto that was kind of a James Bond affair. It came in a small carrying case. when opened the barrel and receiver were already together but the pistol grip stock had to be attached along with everything else. The rear sight was a tangent looking affair that was adjustable out to 200 yards IIRC. The rep was standing there close by watching me in case I had any questions. I remarked that I thought 200 yards was a little optimistic for a .22. He just smiled and said well you might be surprised.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I saw something like that French .22 a couple decades ago and wished I'd had the cash-ola to buy it.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
The book in your link is a good one Bear but it is not the one that "bhk" was referencing. The one "bhk" referenced was written by "E.C. Crossman". The one you referenced was written by "Townsend Whelen".Bear 45/70 wrote:Amazon says "The Handbook on Small Bore Rifle Shhooting" is still available.
http://www.amazon.com/Handbook-Small-Bo ... 1432595628
Here is the link to the book that "bhk" referenced.
http://www.amazon.com/Small-Bore-Rifle- ... 226&sr=1-6
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
I believe you are referring to the Unique model L Carbine/Pistol Combination. I'd like to have one myself...JustaJeepGuy wrote:I saw something like that French .22 a couple decades ago and wished I'd had the cash-ola to buy it.
Nothing so needs reforming as other people's habits.
-Mark Twain
Proverbs 3:5; Philippians 4:13
Got to have a Jones for this
Jones for that
This running with the Joneses boy
Just ain't where it's at
-Mark Twain
Proverbs 3:5; Philippians 4:13
Got to have a Jones for this
Jones for that
This running with the Joneses boy
Just ain't where it's at
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Modoc ED wrote:The book in your link is a good one Bear but it is not the one that "bhk" was referencing. The one "bhk" referenced was written by "E.C. Crossman". The one you referenced was written by "Townsend Whelen".Bear 45/70 wrote:Amazon says "The Handbook on Small Bore Rifle Shhooting" is still available.
http://www.amazon.com/Handbook-Small-Bo ... 1432595628
Here is the link to the book that "bhk" referenced.
http://www.amazon.com/Small-Bore-Rifle- ... 226&sr=1-6
Well, for $75 I will be passing on the hardcover.
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
My copy was given to my grandfather on April 4, 1929 by his mother. My copy has seen a LOT of wear. He was in in 20's at the time and very active in small-bore shooting at the Ludlow Fish and Game Club near Springfield, MA. A trophy he won shooting at that club in 1938 sits on my desk right now.
He built a beautiful Winchester Highwall target rifle for my mother when she was in high school for use on the school shooting team. It had a beaver-tail forearm, wonderfully checkered walnut stock, bull barrel, BSA venier tang rear sight, and Lyman front sight with interchangable inserts. I used this rifle when I was in 5th and 6th grade for earning my NRA marksmanship badges in 4-position small bore. I lost the rifle in a very stupid trade when I was in my early 20's.
He built a beautiful Winchester Highwall target rifle for my mother when she was in high school for use on the school shooting team. It had a beaver-tail forearm, wonderfully checkered walnut stock, bull barrel, BSA venier tang rear sight, and Lyman front sight with interchangable inserts. I used this rifle when I was in 5th and 6th grade for earning my NRA marksmanship badges in 4-position small bore. I lost the rifle in a very stupid trade when I was in my early 20's.
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
My CZ452A with a Super Sniper scope and Federal GM ammo put 10 shots into 4 1/2"@200 yards.
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Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
Good for the salesman for not belaboring the point; people who've already made their minds up can't be convinced of something they can't see, first hand/ Some STILL won't beleive things they have seen.Rusty wrote:I do remember a few years ago at the SHOT show I was looking around at some French gun maker's wares. I can't remember the name of them now, but one of the things they had was a semi automatic .22 auto that was kind of a James Bond affair. It came in a small carrying case. when opened the barrel and receiver were already together but the pistol grip stock had to be attached along with everything else. The rear sight was a tangent looking affair that was adjustable out to 200 yards IIRC. The rep was standing there close by watching me in case I had any questions. I remarked that I thought 200 yards was a little optimistic for a .22. He just smiled and said well you might be surprised.
Hunter Ed. instructor
NRA Basic pistol Inst.
NRA Personal protection inst.
NRA Range safety officer
Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 1
NRA Basic pistol Inst.
NRA Personal protection inst.
NRA Range safety officer
Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 1
Re: .22LR 200 yard shooting
ba_50 wrote:My CZ452A with a Super Sniper scope and Federal GM ammo put 10 shots into 4 1/2"@200 yards.



Makes me want to mess around more with my .22's - is the "Federal GM" ammo one that starts out subsonic so it doesn't tumble when it crosses the speed of sound?
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