I'm not a 10/22 fanatic...but
That's funny about the experiences people have with rifles. Must be really bad luck. I wonder if Ruger had a year or two of worn machinery or something.
I've got a stock '70s 10/22 that has viturally never stovepiped or jammed.--and I seldom clean it. It ejects the duds with a jerk on the toggle and just keeps going. Maybe all the stars were lined up the day it went down the assembly line.
It's accuracy is so-so but with ammo it likes, it can shoot 1" at 50, which is great for a plinker.
I would agree that this is the minimum a buyer should expect from an arms maker.
That's funny about the experiences people have with rifles. Must be really bad luck. I wonder if Ruger had a year or two of worn machinery or something.
I've got a stock '70s 10/22 that has viturally never stovepiped or jammed.--and I seldom clean it. It ejects the duds with a jerk on the toggle and just keeps going. Maybe all the stars were lined up the day it went down the assembly line.
It's accuracy is so-so but with ammo it likes, it can shoot 1" at 50, which is great for a plinker.
I would agree that this is the minimum a buyer should expect from an arms maker.