



Moderator: carlson1
My youngest absolutely loves the 22s. Well, I do as well, but he is eat up with them. I remember shooting that Nylon gun. It wasn't ours though. It must have been a cousins or something. A fun find I am sure.puma guy wrote:I know we mostly discuss and post about carry hand guns and tactical/defense long arms, but I love to shoot .22's.
A tube or tubular magazine consists of an spring loaded inner and an outer tube which holds cartridges longitudely , end to end. Most of them are mounted under the barrel as you see in a lever action Winchester or Marlin, though tube magazines are used on semi-automatic, bolt actions , pump actions, etc. The Nylon 66 has an inner tube with the opening in the butt plate to insert the cartridges, There's a tube that has a spring loaded follower that is pushed in to force the cartridges forward to allow loading into the chamber. Tube magazines on a Winchester '94 and others with under barrel mounts push the rounds rearward toward the lifter. Centerfire rifles typically have to use cartridges with flat nosed bullets to prevent the primer from being detonated by the round behind it during recoil. Hornady makes soft tipped spire and spitzer bullets for many lever action cartridges.goose wrote:My youngest absolutely loves the 22s. Well, I do as well, but he is eat up with them. I remember shooting that Nylon gun. It wasn't ours though. It must have been a cousins or something. A fun find I am sure.puma guy wrote:I know we mostly discuss and post about carry hand guns and tactical/defense long arms, but I love to shoot .22's.
Was it a tubular magazine?
I did, too. I shot one when they came out in 1959. A neighbor of ours bought one and took us out to shoot it. Remington took a real chance producing these guns, but they've endured. Probably far beyond what even the proponents projected. The lever action model of these are selling in the 800-1000 dollar range. K-Mart had them make a model for them that was green - Seneca Green rifles in keeping with the Mohawk and Apache tradition. Two things most every one agrees on- don't oil them and don't disassemble them.WildBill wrote:I always wanted one of those Nylon Remington 66s. I should have bought one when they were new and cheap.
There were many people who did not like the Nylon stock. They sold for about $50 new.
http://www.americanrifleman.org/article ... -nylon-66/
Tubular mag that loads through the butt stock. The most reliable semi-auto 22 I have ever shot.goose wrote:My youngest absolutely loves the 22s. Well, I do as well, but he is eat up with them. I remember shooting that Nylon gun. It wasn't ours though. It must have been a cousins or something. A fun find I am sure.puma guy wrote:I know we mostly discuss and post about carry hand guns and tactical/defense long arms, but I love to shoot .22's.
Was it a tubular magazine?
They are reliable for sure. Over a million made and many still shooting. If you read the article Wild Bill posted the prototype had a failure rate of .005 % with 75,000 rounds.VMI77 wrote:Tubular mag that loads through the butt stock. The most reliable semi-auto 22 I have ever shot.goose wrote:My youngest absolutely loves the 22s. Well, I do as well, but he is eat up with them. I remember shooting that Nylon gun. It wasn't ours though. It must have been a cousins or something. A fun find I am sure.puma guy wrote:I know we mostly discuss and post about carry hand guns and tactical/defense long arms, but I love to shoot .22's.
Was it a tubular magazine?
In the stock. That is right. Good stuff, Thank you.puma guy wrote:A tube or tubular magazine consists of an spring loaded inner and an outer tube which holds cartridges longitudely , end to end. Most of them are mounted under the barrel as you see in a lever action Winchester or Marlin, though tube magazines are used on semi-automatic, bolt actions , pump actions, etc. The Nylon 66 has an inner tube with the opening in the butt plate to insert the cartridges, There's a tube that has a spring loaded follower that is pushed in to force the cartridges forward to allow loading into the chamber. Tube magazines on a Winchester '94 and others with under barrel mounts push the rounds rearward toward the lifter. Centerfire rifles typically have to use cartridges with flat nosed bullets to prevent the primer from being detonated by the round behind it during recoil. Hornady makes soft tipped spire and spitzer bullets for many lever action cartridges.goose wrote:My youngest absolutely loves the 22s. Well, I do as well, but he is eat up with them. I remember shooting that Nylon gun. It wasn't ours though. It must have been a cousins or something. A fun find I am sure.puma guy wrote:I know we mostly discuss and post about carry hand guns and tactical/defense long arms, but I love to shoot .22's.
Was it a tubular magazine?
I should have remembered that. Thank you for the response. (I am currently research/google restricted)VMI77 wrote:Tubular mag that loads through the butt stock. The most reliable semi-auto 22 I have ever shot.
Our local Cabelas has .22 ammo in stock almost all the time, now - quite often without any limits. Our local Gander Mountain store is well stocked in .22 ammo as well.HKsig wrote:... I'd like to get back to shooting 22s but finding the ammo is just ridiculous....
That's a very pretty pink plinker! She's quite a shooter! I bet the rifle is nice, too!Vol Texan wrote:Great photos...I guess I have to post a photo of my daughter after her last outing with her (pink, of course!) Ruger 10/22: