I never was a fan of Remington ammo of any caliber, so I must admit I was biased from the start. 10 round groups were measured outside to outside spread.įirst, a breakdown of the Remington CBee 22 ammo. Temp was 78 deg F, sunny, cross wind of 3 to 7 mph 3:00. The magazines were loaded 1 round each of the different weight lots / rim thickness of each ammo to ensure an objective "mix" of what can be encountered, or if taking the rounds straight out to the box. Some of the group testing was a MKII F, 17" sporter barrel. The rifle used was a Savage MKII BV 20" heavy barrel. I only took the first 50 rounds of the box to do the weight and rim thickness sorting, as that should be enough to give an example of the rest.Ĭhronographing was done 10 feet from the muzzle, average on 5 rounds shot. I started analyzing the ammos the usual way, weighing and rim sorting, then chronographing. Yes, there is also Aguila SSS ammo out there that fits into the same classification / use as the subject ammos, unfortunately not availble at the store I was at.īoth ammos came in a 100 round container, price on both was $9.99, or $.01 a round. So having both of the subject ammos readily available at the store, I purchased both and figured to do a little test while in hand. For the record, if it wasn't for the offensive / defensive actions the foxes were taking, I wouldn't have been looking for a "solution". Recently having a population of 5 grey foxes move under the neighbor's shed (and the subsequent losing the fear of people, aggresive stances taken against myself and my wife) had me at the store looking for a "solution". These 2 specialty ammos are generally used for backyard pest removal among other applications where "stealth" is required - low noise / less detection.
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