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S&W M&P 15-22 Review

JR1

Private
Full Member
Minuteman
Apr 26, 2010
21
0
52
USA
Hello,

I don’t post here often, but I thought this was worth sharing. I’m a career LEO with over 20 years in the profession of arms. I used to shoot competitively (before kids), and I shoot on average 25,000 rounds per year. I don’t usually get excited about too much, but this might interest you.

I bought the S&W M&P 15-22 model 811033 and added the following accessories and furniture:

Magpul CTR stock
Magpul rear BUIS
Knights foregrip
EOTech
M-3 weapon light
Magpul MIAD grip
Midwest Industries QD sling loop
H&K picatinny QD sling loop
VTAC sling
AAC 5.56 Blackout flash hider
Surefire rail covers
2 spare mags

(The birdcage flash hider screw right off with no effort.)



Before you loose your mind on the thought that I might have spent more on accessories than on the actual gun, bear in mind that a lot if these items were spares that I had on my workbench.

Additionally, everything is in the same place as my service M4, so it’s a great understudy for training. Since my service carbine has a shorter barrel with a shorter quad rail, I placed the foregrip and light in the same location as my service rifle, even though it looks too far back on the 22’s rail.

The rifle is 6.5 lbs with all the toys on it (as photographed). It was actually lighter than advertised out of the box at 4.75 lbs. It balances nicely, with the CG just forward of the mag well. My M4's CG is in the center of the mag well, so it balances fairly similarly.

The trigger is a single stage and consistently broke at 4.875 lbs. I actually like it and will probably will leave it that way. My service carbine has the stock Colt M4A1 trigger group and it’s 6.125 lbs. Since I'm used to that, this trigger feels just fine to me.

Shooting impressions:

I mostly shot round nose lead ball Remington standard velocity bulk. I shot 300 rounds without a single malfunction with that fodder.

I zero’d it at 25 yards. My groups at 50 yards were 2.5", 3.75”, 2.5”, 2", 1.75” (one 2.5" 10-shot). For an average of 2.5”. The hits were about 1" high at 50 with the 25-yard zero.

At 25 yards, lead ball gave me 1.5”, 1.25”, 1 1/8”, 7/8”, and 1.25" for an average of 1.2”. Keep in mind these groups were using a red dot and shooting off the seat of my four-wheeler.

I shot some old gold-colored mystery HPs just to see how they shot. The original box is gone, and they now reside in a ziplock, but I shot them for fun. They seemed to vary in recoil and report, so they might be a little old. At any rate, they shot 1 1/3” and 1 1/8” at 25 yards, but I had one 1 malfunction. I cleared it and kept shooting, so I don’t know what the problem was. The good news is, since the manual of arms is the same as my M4, it was instinctive to tap and rack my way to a fresh round. On that note, since the slide locks open empty, reloads were as natural as with any M4 or AR15.

I took it back to 100 yards, and the old hollow-points gave me 7" and 6" groups. The hits were actually roughly POA since they were scattered evenly on the 8" target. If anything, they were ever so slightly high. I thought there would be more drop than that. With the lead ball, I got a 6" and a 3.5” group. Both groups were strung vertically. I was shooting a red target with a red dot off of an improvised rest, so I’m sure that wasn’t the best it could do. I doubt I'll shoot much if any past 50 yards with this gun.


I didn’t work up the nerve to put my M4-2000 on it yet, but I probably will eventually since the Blackout begs for it. I have to be certain I won’t end up with a baffle strike first. I don’t see it staying on for more than a few rounds, even so. I understand they will junk up a rifle can pretty quick.

I am extremely happy with this purchase so far. It’s a gun I can use to teach new shooters and it’s surprisingly quiet. With its adjustable stock and low recoil, my kids enjoy shooting it. Not to mention, it’s cheap to shoot and it’s quiet enough to not be bothersome to shoot on my ranch. My wife said she couldn't hear me shooting from inside the house, 200 yards away.

If you have been thinking about getting a 22 understudy for your M4 or AR, I would highly recommend this one.

Best regards,
JR
 
I've had two I have a camo one with a sweet 22 on top of it and it doesn't leave the truck they are great little guns the first one I had didn't like hollow points
 
Thanks for posting.i'm looking at picking one of these up in the near future. If you don't' mind what pricing did you get on it?
 
I won one of these in the Oregon Sniper Challenge a few years ago. S&W even let me upgrade to the threaded model without charging. I tried to at least pay for shipping but they wouldn't hear it. I've put a few mags threw it but it has been neglected since. I need to put optics on it and shoot it.
 
I got it for wholesale since my brother has a small gun shop. $409.
 
Got mine for $407 with my wally discount at the time..sold it for $330 :(

Sent from my DROID4 using Tapatalk 2
 
Nice review and great mods to an already nice rifle. I have one as well, that I use just for pure fun and used to help introduce my son (now 10) to shooting. It is one of our favorite rifles to shoot together - cheap, light, reliable, and reasonably accurate.

Good luck with it.
 
I too love mine. I have one of the "first generation" ones that does not have a threaded barrel. The only issue I had was that S&W had a problem with the first gen recoil spring so mine would ftf occasionally. Did some google searching and found that they fixed it with a different spring that was blue in color. Sent it back to S&W and got it back a few days later with the new spring and now it runs flawlessly. So just a heads up to anyone who has problems, make sure you have the blue spring.
 
Got one myself, and in its latest config, it mimics my 16" AR. People are always asking about that rifle when I take it out. Very fun to shoot and the kids took to it quickly. Mine prefers Mini-Mags the most. Just don't ask me how longs its been since I've seen them on a shelf, what I do have in mini-mags I don't shoot.
 
I bought mine to use with my slidefire stock and for my now 6 hear old to shoot. It is light enough to actually recoil enough to bump my finger off the trigger so the slidefire actually worked pretty good when I paid attention to my holding the rifle right.

Tis is a great gun for a small kid looking to shoot like dad, or mom.

As for these very rare 22lr ammo you speak of... Check wikiarms. There is some to be had if you look.