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Floridian Hospitality
On Oct 14, 4:50*pm, EmpacherFan wrote:
In article 6fbaee9b-c332-4c39-b500- , says... On Oct 14, 3:02*pm, GuzzisRule wrote: On Sun, 14 Oct 2012 15:31:17 -0400, EmpacherFan wrote: In article , says... On Wed, 10 Oct 2012 19:54:49 -0400, EmpacherFan wrote: In article 0fbd714d-0101-4ac3-b0a5-da80addeaa79 , says... On Oct 10, 9:43 am, EmpacherFan wrote: In article c8d644c3-cbd3-4457-8d6e-aaf02ce3e028 You are absolutely correct as far as it goes. The pistol feels the same and breaks down the same, but it doesn't shoot the same. There's much more recoil and muzzle flip from a .40 S&W round than a .22LR round in the same semi-auto. Also consider that the .40 round weighs about five times what the .22 round weighs. Ten rounds of .22 in a magazine is going to weigh a lot less than 10 rounds of .40 in a magazine, and that will change the balance of the weapon considerably. Several posters have suggested the way to go is with a nice defensive semi-auto and a separate and much less expensive .22 semi-auto. I agree. Why? If the purpose of the .22 is to practice cheaply, and the .22 conversion kits aren't the way to go because they don't have the same heft, kick,balance, etc., etc., what is gained by practicing with a totally different, lightweight, low-kick .22? The logic there escapes me. A purpose of a 22 is to be able to fire lots of round at a range or in your backyard and just become more proficient at handling and shooting a firearm. Using a conversion kit will help you do that for sure but because of the differences in the rounds I don't think it will add much to your proficiency in firing bigger rounds in the same handgun for the reasons already stated. Another reasons to get an inexpensive Ruger is the cost of magazines. Ruger magazines are around $10 I think. You can buy a handful of them and load them up at the range and fire without reloading every couple of minutes. Plus you can try out different rounds in different magazines to see which work the best for you and the gun. |
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