From the Dunn Armory: .22 Long Rifle Rimfire Cartridge

I learned to shoot using the .22 Long Rifle rimfire cartridge and it is still one of my favorite and most used rounds. The rimfire’s low felt recoil and fairly quiet report makes it a good cartridge for beginning and youth shooters. It is a great small game hunting cartridge as well as being a good round for economical tactical training. While growing up, shooting up a few boxes of .22 rimfire ammo was good cheap fun. Over the last several years, I have gained a new appreciation for the .22 LR, as the prices skyrocketed and the availability virtually dried up in the marketplace. Luckily, I had several bricks to last through the shortage. I’m glad to see my faithful cartridges back on store shelves and the prices becoming a little bit more affordable.

All of the rifles that I grew up with would chamber and fire the .22 Short, .22 Long and .22 Long Rifle cartridges from the same gun. The predecessors of these .22 caliber rimfire cartridges are the BB Cap and CB Cap rimfire cartridges (Bullet Breech and Conical Ball respectively). The BB Cap was invented in France sometime in the 1840s for use with indoor target rifles in shooting galleries and close range pest control. Louis Nicolas Flobert made “Parlor Guns” that would fire the modified percussion caps the he developed in 1845. The BB and CB caps do not utilize gun powder, they only use the priming compound in the rim to propel the projectile. The 6mm Flobert BB caps are still popular in Europe for close range pest control and are still being manufactured by RWS Ammunition in Germany.

Just as Flobert modified a percussion cap by adding a rim, Smith & Wesson developed a .22 rimfire cartridge by modifying the BB Cap design. Smith & Wesson added gunpowder (black powder) to the cartridge, which was ignited by the priming/fulminating compound in the rim of the cartridge when struck by the firing pin, thus the projectile was propelled at a significantly higher velocity than the BB and CB Caps. After Smith & Wesson struck a deal with inventor Rollin White to use his bored-through revolver cylinder patent, they were able to manufacture their newly designed .22 rimfire revolver and cartridge in 1857. This .22 rimfire cartridge invented by Smith & Wesson is the cartridge that we know as the .22 Short and it is the oldest self-contained cartridge that is still being manufactured! The first of these .22 rimfire cartridges used copper shell casings rather than the brass cases that many manufacturers use today. Eley’s Tenex ammunition still uses a copper alloy case for their high quality ammunition.

Here we can see the size comparisons of the .22 Short, .22 Long Rifle and the .223 Remington cartridges.

The .22 Long rimfire cartridge came along in 1871 and its case was longer than the .22 Short’s case. The .22 Long used a 29 grain bullet and was designed for use in revolvers but was soon used in rifles as well. Sometime in the early1880s, the .22 Extra Long cartridge was developed. In 1887, Stevens Arms and Tool Company developed the .22 Long Rifle rimfire cartridge by utilizing a 40 grain bullet taken from the .22 Extra Long cartridge and the .22 Long’s case. All of these rimfire cartridges use a heeled bullet, meaning that the bullet diameter is the same as the case’s diameter and the bottom of the bullet has a “heel” that is a shorter diameter that fits into the case. The case mouth is crimped to the heel/stem of the bullet. This allows the case and the bullet to be flush where they make contact with one another. Though the .22 short is good for close range pest control and some companies still load the .22 Long, the .22 Long Rifle cartridge reaches the highest velocity and is much more popular worldwide. The .22 Extra Long was not a bad cartridge, but being longer than the .22 Long Rifle, thus not chambering in .22 LR guns, the Extra Long fell out of favor in the 1930s. Here in the United States, we use a lot of .22 LR. We use it for pest control, hunting, plinking, teaching new or young shooters, competition, indoor self-defense and tactical training, as there are many .22 conversion kits for many popular firearms (1911, AR-15, Glock, etc.). The .22 LR round is also used in the Olympics, 4H shooting programs and the Boy Scouts of America use it for training as well. I guarantee that many farm animals have been humanely harvested by using .22 Long Rifle cartridges since the late 19th Century.

There are many variations of the .22 Long Rifle cartridge; standard-velocity (1,100 fps), sub-sonic (travels slower than the speed of sound, below 1,100 fps), high-velocity (1,300 fps), hyper-velocity (over 1,400 fps), Shot cartridges (for birds, rats, snakes, etc.), tracer and full metal jacket ammo for the military. If you want to shoot a fun and quiet gun, shoot a .22 LR firearm equipped with a suppressor!

Pictured above is CCI’s .22 LR Shotshell. This cartridge uses #12 Shot that travels at 1000 fps when fired.

Many folks don’t think of the .22 LR as a good round for self-defense, but make no bones about it, a .22 caliber hollow point bouncing around in your body would be nasty. The ability to shoot confidently with well-placed shots is more possible for most people that do not get to train with their larger caliber guns. When I was a kid there was always talk about “hitmen” using suppressed pistols chambered in .22 LR. I can’t answer to whether they used them or not but it would make sense that it would do the job, as they are easily suppressed and very quiet when sub-sonic cartridges are used (no sonic boom), the guns are light-weight and easily concealable, and the bullets would inflict severe tissue damage. I guarantee that if you score a headshot on any two legged critter with CCI’s Velocitor ammo, its going down, just get out of the way of it falling on you!

Here we can see some of Winchester’s Subsonic 42 MAX cartridges.

The .22 Long Rifle cartridge has had some positive improvements since the days of it being a black powder round. Modern propellants and priming compounds are more powerful, reliable and yield much higher velocities than earlier produced cartridges. Priming compounds used to be made of mercury fulminate and as we know, mercury is hyper-toxic and not so good for our health! Other non-mercury based chemical compounds like lead azide, lead styphnate and tetrazene are currently being used as priming compounds. The procedures for manufacturing rimfire ammunition has become a safer process. Modern cartridges use special brass as well as copper alloys for their cases and CCI is even manufacturing lead free bullets made of copper particles and polymer (to comply with California’s lead free laws). Manufacturing the .22 rimfire cartridge is comparatively a much more complicated process than that of a standard centerfire cartridge. Though it isn’t the easiest process in the world, there are reloading kits available for the .22 LR cartridge, as well as priming compound. It’s actually a relaxing thing to do on a Sunday afternoon!

Pictured above are Federal’s .22 LR Game-Shok cartridges. These crimped cartridges contain 25 grain #12 lead bird shot.

The .22 LR cartridge will remain one of the best-selling cartridges worldwide, as long as there are guns to fire them. If I could only have one gun for the rest of my life, it would be chambered for the flexible .22 Long Rifle rimfire cartridge. In a survival situation, I could hunt for many types and sizes of creatures without tearing the meat up too badly. I could adequately defend myself with .22 rimfires and I could carry a lot of cartridges, as they are small and not very heavy. I have great memories of shooting .22s with my Dad and brothers. The smell of the first few shots of a .22 brings me right back to those lazy days.

Pictured above are Federal’s .22 LR Game-Shok cartridges. These crimped cartridges contain 25 grain #12 lead bird shot.

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About the Author: Patriotman

Patriotman currently ekes out a survivalist lifestyle in a suburban northeastern state as best as he can. He has varied experience in political science, public policy, biological sciences, and higher education. Proudly Catholic and an Eagle Scout, he has no military experience and thus offers a relatable perspective for the average suburban prepper who is preparing for troubled times on the horizon with less than ideal teams and in less than ideal locations. Brushbeater Store Page: http://bit.ly/BrushbeaterStore

3 Comments

  1. Suburban Guy December 2, 2021 at 18:40

    The lowly .22, “not good for anything, ‘cept pissing off bad guys,” i hear that often, but when i ask them to take a shot from CCI pre-fragmented rounds, Bullet Weight: 32gr Muzzle Velocity: 1640fps, no one has accepted the offer..

    When we travel, we haul a ruger 10/22 in a FAB Defense folding M4 style stock with 5 25 rnd mags loaded w the above ammo, and another 400 rnds in a small pouch.

    Running a 1-4 lpvo illuminated optic, that allows me to hit dimes at 25yds and put accurate fire out to 100yds if need be, though i suspect most engagements would be at <50 yds in the areas we tend to travel..

    I can dump 25 rounds accurately in nanoseconds and create devastating wounds.

    Everything fits nicely in a tennis racket bag….No raised eyebrows hauling into hotel rooms, condos, etc….

    Is it the ultimate, no, but its something that wifey can handle w ease if need be….

    How many of us have killed many, and varied game with it, and i know for a fact that it is the premier choice for poachers in WNC…

    The Israeli's use it for selective crowd control too….

    jus sayin…

    • Mickey December 2, 2021 at 20:23

      Ah, the old “but would you stand in front of it?” retort.

      I wouldn’t stand in front of a piss-fulled super soaker, but that doesn’t make it a good handgun.

  2. Michael December 4, 2021 at 16:32

    Well, it is interesting that Mickey didn’t notice the first commenter was talking about a 10-22 Carbine with a folding stock and 25 round magazines loaded with pretty hot rounds. I prefer CCI mini mags as I’ve taken down some large pests with them.

    THAT’s NOT a 22 pistol. It’s actually from my research a bit hotter than a 22 Mag from most pistols.

    As a rough measurement those rounds from a 10-22 is pretty close to the close-range effects of a 380 from a pistol. However, it’s LOW Recoil carbine able to easily dump 3-4 rounds accurately into a target before some folks can get the second aimed shot off with a small pistol.

    That and past 25 yards the accuracy of most pistol shooters against an active target drops of radically while the carbine is singing happy. I’ve hunted deer with a handgun, but I’d prefer to survival hunt with a carbine.

    But I remember all have opinions but in the end we must “Run what we Brung” when things get stupid.

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