Ruger 10-22: from caterpillar to butterfly

Gordon Hutchinson

December 02, 2009 at 9:58 am  | Mobile Reader | Pring this storyPrint 

The Lapua Midas (upper left) priced out at $18 per box of 50. When shooters begin pursuing the perfect group, even ammo prices become unimportant.
Gordon Hutchinson
The Lapua Midas (upper left) priced out at $18 per box of 50. When shooters begin pursuing the perfect group, even ammo prices become unimportant.
I remember the first Ruger 10-22 carbine I came across.

Home on leave from the 82nd Airborne at Fort Bragg, N.C., in the early 1970s, I took my father’s brand-new Ruger .22 rifle to my grandparents’ dairy farm in Tangipahoa Parish.

I was a little surprised my father had bought the rifle — he really wasn’t into guns like me. I guess he saw it, and the new and innovative 10-shot rotary magazine intrigued him.

Walking underneath a large hickory tree next to one of the pastures, I started popping individual nuts off the limbs at various heights with the iron sights on the gun.

As the nuts continued to ricochet off into parts unknown, I became more and more impressed with the accuracy of this little gun, and decided I had to have one.

Within a year, I had my first Ruger 10-22. Mine was one of many thousands sold since the introduction of the design in the mid-1960s.

Since then, this rotary-magazine carbine, made purposely to look and feel like the popular Caliber .30 M-1 Carbine used during World War II, has become one of the biggest selling rimfire rifles in the world.

Easily replaceable parts make the 10-22 an experimenter’s dream.

Tim Brunett, a retired lieutenant with the Louisiana State Police, has a jones for accurate rimfires, and introduced me to the vast and ever-expanding cult that has grown up around this ubiquitous little rifle.

“It is easy,” he told me, “to build a highly accurized 10-22 without using a single Ruger part.”

The basic parts and accessories from a list of manufacturers seems endless, and boggles the mind.

“I like Green Mountain barrels,” he said. “There’s a popular gun forum called ‘rimfirecentral.com’ that discusses every feature of .22 rimfire shooting. You can pick up a lot just reading the comments, and it seems the general consensus is Green Mountain gives the most bang for the buck in barrels.

“You can spend more on Volquartsen, or Kid,” he said, naming two high-end parts manufacturers, “but the difference comes down to tiny fractions of an inch.”

Of course, there is that accuracy thing.

Like the audiophile pursuing the purest sound possible, the accuracy freak keeps honing, adding, buying, experimenting to reach the elusive one-hole shot — a .22 that will shoot a ragged hole at 50 yards with multiple shots.

“That’s the ultimate,” Brunett said. “Generally, you’ve really accomplished that with a rifle that will group inside a dime-sized circle at 50 yards. And there are so many factors that affect accuracy, it’s a never-ending quest.”

He has three 10-22s that bear resemblance to Bill Ruger’s original design only in the fact they are semi-automatic .22s with a rotary-box magazine. None of the three could be touched in component cost for under $600.

Perhaps his favorite, and least noisy in the gaudiness of its attire, is a rifle with a Boyd Evolution Ambidextrous stock — a hollow-formed laminate stock that will fit either right- or left-handed shooters.

This rifle carries a 16.5-inch Green Mountain fluted stainless barrel with a chromed and striated Kid bolt.

He also personally replaced parts of the trigger mechanism with drop-in components that lightened and tightened the trigger pull.

“I’m not the expert some of these guys are,” he said, “and so many things affect accuracy — from your rest, your glass, the ammo the rifle likes — but this little rifle, I can get into three-quarters of an inch at 50 yards.”

Ammo is another fascinating subject in accurizing these rimfires.

Brunett broke out a couple of ammo cans filled with an array of high-end .22 shells ranging from $4.50 a box of 50 up to $18 per box.

“The $18 stuff was a little bit of a surprise,” he snorted. “I ordered some of the Lapua Midas in the silver box without paying a whole lot of attention to the price. When it came in and I saw the total, I checked the line on the cartridges. It was pricier than I realized.

“I can’t really say it shoots better than some of the other stuff. At that price, you tend to shoot conservatively, and it’s questionable if it gains you that much improvement over the $4.50 stuff.”

Practically all high-end target .22 ammo is standard velocity, and is manufactured to much higher tolerances than the chain store box carton variety. But Brunett goes even further.

Like most accuracy nuts in pursuit of the perfect group, he records his groups, and notices lot numbers on manufacturer’s boxes. He also has a tool known as a “rimfire rim thickness gauge” with which he can measure the diameter of the cases for uniformity and proper sizing to fit within the finely machined chambers of the .22s. As with all guns, the better fit in the chamber, the better accuracy at the other end.

He offered another tip for those who want accuracy, but want to reach out a little farther with their rimfire shooting: “I like CCI Mini Mags for accuracy if (you) want hotter stuff. Everyone on the forums seems to agree they are excellent lower-priced ammo.”

I’ve been to rimfire matches where people had spent countless hours, and well over $1,000 to build competitive 10-22s that would produce the ever-elusive one-hole shot.

As with all hobbies, such a pursuit can become all-consuming, but the results of such expenditures and work can be truly astounding. And the shooting these guns can offer is the pleasure these aficionados constantly work to achieve.

Rimfire shooting is less intrusive in terms of noise than other shooting sports, and there is a whole sub-cult of these shooters expounding on the qualities of suppressors that reduce the noise even further, making the ranges where they are fired even less of a noise nuisance.

It’s easier to set up a rimfire range with less land, less backstop, less everything. With the inherent accuracy potential, it’s easy to see why .22 shooting is exploding in the shooting world — and with the easily modified and improved Ruger 10-22 clones, it’s easy to understand why these are among the most popular designs on the market today.

Gordon Hutchinson’s newest book, written with Todd Masson, is The Great New Orleans Gun Grab. A searing expose’ of illegal gun confiscations in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, it is available on line at www.neworleansgungrab.com.

Hutchinson’s first book, The Quest and the Quarry, is a celebration of Southern deer hunting and a coming-of-age novel that parallels the lives of a line of trophy bucks and the youth of a Mississippi farm family that hunt them. Go to www.thequestandthequarry.com.

Both books were chosen as Books of the Year by the Southeastern Outdoor Press Association, and are available by calling the publisher at (800) 538-4355.

Visit Hutchinson’s new blog for more on guns, politics, and shooting at www.theshootist.net.


View other articles written Gordon Hutchinson



Reports / Forum
Stuff happens  This report contains photos  
May 20 at 10:39 am | 4698 Views | 4 Comments
PAC bank withdrawal  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 3:39 pm | 2562 Views | 29 Comments
5/18/13 RIGOLETS  This report contains photos  
May 20 at 7:30 am | 2443 Views | 2 Comments
dispute of boiling crawfish 
May 20 at 4:32 pm | 2343 Views | 25 Comments
Capt. Bob's Leeville Report  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 2:36 pm | 2278 Views | 19 Comments
Fourchon Beach 
May 18 at 10:36 pm | 2066 Views | 37 Comments
Windy day Trout 5-19-13  This report contains photos  
May 19 at 5:36 pm | 1616 Views | 1 Comments
Fouchon 5/18  This report contains photos  
May 18 at 12:56 pm | 1530 Views | 1 Comments
Summer Time Bite Is On!  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 12:14 pm | 1481 Views | 5 Comments
Special trouts  This report contains photos  
May 19 at 9:00 pm | 1449 Views | 0 Comments
box stands  This report contains photos  
May 19 at 8:55 pm | 1254 Views | 4 Comments
Rigolets Trout Slam  This report contains photos  
May 23 at 10:36 am | 1219 Views | 2 Comments
New to Inshore Fishing - Hopedale & MRGO? 
May 20 at 10:59 am | 1142 Views | 5 Comments
West Virginians Brought Luck  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 1:16 pm | 1127 Views | 1 Comments
Great Morning Bashing The trout 5-22-13  This report contains photos  
May 22 at 10:03 pm | 1050 Views | 2 Comments
Trout Slam 5-18-13  This report contains photos  
May 18 at 5:14 pm | 1013 Views | 1 Comments
Cow island?? 
May 20 at 10:01 pm | 957 Views | 16 Comments
Lafitte Reds 5/18/13  This report contains photos  
May 22 at 8:12 am | 936 Views | 0 Comments
Summer on Toledo Bend  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 1:52 am | 855 Views | 0 Comments
94 TROUT,7 REDS,1 DRUM,05-19-13  This report contains photos  
May 19 at 9:36 pm | 832 Views | 0 Comments
Post | Reports | Forum
Fourchon Beach 
May 18 at 10:36 pm | 2066 Views | 37 Comments
PAC bank withdrawal  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 3:39 pm | 2562 Views | 29 Comments
dispute of boiling crawfish 
May 20 at 4:32 pm | 2343 Views | 25 Comments
Capt. Bob's Leeville Report  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 2:36 pm | 2278 Views | 19 Comments
Cow island?? 
May 20 at 10:01 pm | 957 Views | 16 Comments
How much setback ?  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 6:49 pm | 495 Views | 7 Comments
How to catch crawfish??? 
Yesterday at 10:24 am | 251 Views | 7 Comments
Causeway Launch 
May 19 at 5:09 pm | 535 Views | 6 Comments
150 TROUT,05-24-13  This report contains photos  
20 hours ago | 536 Views | 6 Comments
Sorrel 5/18 
May 18 at 5:16 pm | 598 Views | 5 Comments
New to Inshore Fishing - Hopedale & MRGO? 
May 20 at 10:59 am | 1142 Views | 5 Comments
Summer Time Bite Is On!  This report contains photos  
May 21 at 12:14 pm | 1481 Views | 5 Comments
Frank Davis 
May 23 at 9:06 am | 451 Views | 5 Comments
Wanting an inshore charter in NOLA area 
May 23 at 10:20 am | 217 Views | 5 Comments
Just another scam 
22 hours ago | 230 Views | 5 Comments
JLS report? 
May 19 at 5:22 pm | 438 Views | 4 Comments
box stands  This report contains photos  
May 19 at 8:55 pm | 1254 Views | 4 Comments
Stuff happens  This report contains photos  
May 20 at 10:39 am | 4698 Views | 4 Comments
Fish cleaning instruction 
May 22 at 7:37 pm | 429 Views | 4 Comments
Question 
21 hours ago | 195 Views | 4 Comments
Post | Reports | Forum
Good As It Gets 5-25-13  This report contains photos  
10 minutes ago | 15 Views | 0 Comments
Sweetwater Guide Service and Marina  This report contains photos  
2 hours ago | 87 Views | 0 Comments
Good Day in PAC  This report contains photos  
3 hours ago | 91 Views | 2 Comments
redfish in the pass 
3 hours ago | 35 Views | 0 Comments
Anyone interested in a charter? 
12 hours ago | 89 Views | 1 Comments
Great day of fishing out of Sweetwater/Delacroix!!! 
12 hours ago | 214 Views | 0 Comments
Crabbing 
13 hours ago | 72 Views | 0 Comments
Shrimp Reports 
14 hours ago | 80 Views | 0 Comments
Open Dates this weekend!! 
17 hours ago | 89 Views | 0 Comments
Castnet Shrimp 
18 hours ago | 99 Views | 0 Comments
Fast N Furious 5-24-13  This report contains photos  
19 hours ago | 409 Views | 2 Comments
Live shrimp? In dularge area 
19 hours ago | 67 Views | 0 Comments
Grand Isle or Elmers surf fishing?? 
19 hours ago | 239 Views | 2 Comments
Looking for live shrimp in dularge area 
20 hours ago | 40 Views | 0 Comments
Looking for live shrimp in dularge area 
20 hours ago | 26 Views | 0 Comments
Good Day 
20 hours ago | 239 Views | 0 Comments
150 TROUT,05-24-13  This report contains photos  
20 hours ago | 536 Views | 6 Comments
Capt Moore Fish with the King  This report contains photos  
21 hours ago | 135 Views | 0 Comments
Question 
21 hours ago | 195 Views | 4 Comments
Another one stop shop  This report contains photos  
21 hours ago | 276 Views | 0 Comments
Post | Reports | Forum