Yes
Most .22 rifles are sighted at 25 yards. Some may be sighted for 50 yards, depends on your hunting. Try 25 yards, and hold higher for longer shots.
Yes, Remington makes a rifle in the 700 series, its a Remington 700 SPS Varmint (sells for around $500 to $550, it shoots the .17 Remington Fireball, which is a .17 cal bullet, The stock is Synthetic with a vented beavertail style forend, guarenteed to shoot 2.5 MOA at 100 yards, but some are better than other Ive seen some shoot 1 MOA at 100 yards (3 shot group). In Oklahoma city Sportsmans Wharehouse actually has one on sale for around $470 and I believe it has a heavy, 26 inch barrell on it, hope that helps ! Yes, Remington makes a rifle in the 700 series, its a Remington 700 SPS Varmint (sells for around $500 to $550, it shoots the .17 Remington Fireball, which is a .17 cal bullet, The stock is Synthetic with a vented beavertail style forend, guarenteed to shoot 2.5 MOA at 100 yards, but some are better than other Ive seen some shoot 1 MOA at 100 yards (3 shot group). In Oklahoma city Sportsmans Wharehouse actually has one on sale for around $470 and I believe it has a heavy, 26 inch barrell on it, hope that helps !
Longest distance I have seen shot with a .22 in competition is 200 yards. I was using a Winchester model 52B at the time.
Depends on what firearm has a 22 inch barrel. If it is a .22 LR, it can shoot about a mile and a half- or 100 yards accurately. If it is a 30-06, it can shoot about 5 miles, or 500 yards accurately.
Yes
The rifle might, the shooter wont. sales@countrygunsmith.net
well i shot 270 yards. i sighted it in on 100 yards. i put the cross hairs on the bucks backbone, dropped it. well i shot 270 yards. i sighted it in on 100 yards. i put the cross hairs on the bucks backbone, dropped it.
If you shoot 150 Grain @ 2800 fps it will drop -10.8 inches if sighted zero at 100 yards.
i shot a buck last year at a little over 350 yards with my Remington model 700 30-06 it dropped in one shot im sure it can shoot farther than that accurately. 150 grain core lokd are the best
out to 1000 yards if you do your part.
Below the aiming spot.
Most .22 rifles are sighted at 25 yards. Some may be sighted for 50 yards, depends on your hunting. Try 25 yards, and hold higher for longer shots.
Yes, Remington makes a rifle in the 700 series, its a Remington 700 SPS Varmint (sells for around $500 to $550, it shoots the .17 Remington Fireball, which is a .17 cal bullet, The stock is Synthetic with a vented beavertail style forend, guarenteed to shoot 2.5 MOA at 100 yards, but some are better than other Ive seen some shoot 1 MOA at 100 yards (3 shot group). In Oklahoma city Sportsmans Wharehouse actually has one on sale for around $470 and I believe it has a heavy, 26 inch barrell on it, hope that helps ! Yes, Remington makes a rifle in the 700 series, its a Remington 700 SPS Varmint (sells for around $500 to $550, it shoots the .17 Remington Fireball, which is a .17 cal bullet, The stock is Synthetic with a vented beavertail style forend, guarenteed to shoot 2.5 MOA at 100 yards, but some are better than other Ive seen some shoot 1 MOA at 100 yards (3 shot group). In Oklahoma city Sportsmans Wharehouse actually has one on sale for around $470 and I believe it has a heavy, 26 inch barrell on it, hope that helps !
it should shoot 1inch or better three shot group at 100 yards. try different bullet weights.
I have been hunting my whole life, and I recently went out last weekend to go hunt deer. While in the blind I had my rangefinder out and sighted in a deer at 343 yards. I was wondering the same thing-How far can this shoot. I aimed about 2 inches high and pulled the trigger. Next thing you know I have a 6x6 buck! So to answer your question 300+ yards.
Unless your barrel has been fitted with a poly-choke (adjustable by turning) there is no reason why you shouldn't be able to shoot rifled slugs in your Model 10 Remington shotgun. Don't expect to see tack-driving accuracy with so-called rifled slugs though. Start out shooting at paper plates from 50 yards as you'll need to find out where to hold the front bead in relation to the target (paper plate).