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.223 can actually do a lot of what larger cartridges can do maybe not as well, but it can actually be shot at 800-1000 yards. With a 22lr you have to shoot at shorter ranges and pretend your not. Its a totally different type of "training". If its about cost then why not shoot a .17 air rifle those are even cheaper then 22lr to shoot, and their performance is closer to a 22lr then a .223 is to a 22lr.
.223 can actually do a lot of what larger cartridges can do maybe not as well, but it can actually be shot at 800-1000 yards. With a 22lr you have to shoot at shorter ranges and pretend your not. Its a totally different type of "training". If its about cost then why not shoot a .17 air rifle those are even cheaper then 22lr to shoot, and their performance is closer to a 22lr then a .223 is to a 22lr.
You’ve made several posts on the .22 subject and it’s obvious you don’t understand.
Matching performance at the same range doesn’t really matter.
If you are shooting a 2 moa target with a .22 at 200 yds and have to hold for wind, you’re getting the same training value as shooting a 2 moa target at 600 yds and holding wind with a .223.
There’s something to be said for recoil management training, but a .223 won’t get you that either.
Yeah, with 75-80+ gr projectiles, 223 is way more capable than a lot of people give it credit for. I've had mine out to 1350 now with reasonable success. Wind is a real bitch after 1k, though.
On recoil, it depends. My 223 is maybe a pound lighter than my PRS match rifle, but my match rig wears a brake and my 223 has a Ultra 7 can on it. As a result, the 223 actually pushes me around more on barricades and such than my 6 Creedmoor does.
Recoiling more and recoiling enough to make you get behind the gun is different.
Does it recoil enough to make you build a better position?
How much are you guys really saving on 223 vs 6/6.5 whatever you're shooting in matches?
6/something... buck a case averaged over 10 shots before you lose or wear it out, 35 cents for a berger, 30-40 grs of powder, primer
223 - looks like 73-80gr ELDs are 21 cents, call it 23gr powder, same primer. unless you' shooting free/pickup brass, brass might be half the cost?
My math says its 20-25 cents saving per unless you start skimping on components?
Not burning out a barrel seems like it might be more interesting though.
How much are you guys really saving on 223 vs 6/6.5 whatever you're shooting in matches?
6/something... buck a case averaged over 10 shots before you lose or wear it out, 35 cents for a berger, 30-40 grs of powder, primer
223 - looks like 73-80gr ELDs are 21 cents, call it 23gr powder, same primer. unless you' shooting free/pickup brass, brass might be half the cost?
My math says its 20-25 cents saving per unless you start skimping on components?
Not burning out a barrel seems like it might be more interesting though.
How much are you guys really saving on 223 vs 6/6.5 whatever you're shooting in matches?
6/something... buck a case averaged over 10 shots before you lose or wear it out, 35 cents for a berger, 30-40 grs of powder, primer
223 - looks like 73-80gr ELDs are 21 cents, call it 23gr powder, same primer. unless you' shooting free/pickup brass, brass might be half the cost?
My math says its 20-25 cents saving per unless you start skimping on components?
Not burning out a barrel seems like it might be more interesting though.
How much are you guys really saving on 223 vs 6/6.5 whatever you're shooting in matches?
6/something... buck a case averaged over 10 shots before you lose or wear it out, 35 cents for a berger, 30-40 grs of powder, primer
223 - looks like 73-80gr ELDs are 21 cents, call it 23gr powder, same primer. unless you' shooting free/pickup brass, brass might be half the cost?
My math says its 20-25 cents saving per unless you start skimping on components?
Not burning out a barrel seems like it might be more interesting though.