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My brother has a 15-22 with a 50 rnd. drum. It's a fun gun. :s0139:

My only rub is, it's not mil.spec. and it's mostly proprietary. :(
50 round drum would be great if using a binary trigger. Also because oem mags are cheap plastic mags for these. Plinkster used to make 35 round mags for them which are thicker plastic.
 
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I haven't bought one in a while, but Black Dog made some good .22 magazines with metal feed lips. :)
I seem to recall a black dog machine drum for the mp5 22 also. Never bought one cuz they are crazy expensive (1/3 the price of the gun with mags). They look to be well made though, which is most important.
 
Like I said, I haven't bought any new .22 magazines in a while. But, as I remember, one big no-no about some of them was, "Do not use any type of bore cleaner on them as it would melt the plastic." :eek:
 
Like I said, I haven't bought any new .22 magazines in a while. But, as I remember, one big no-no about some of them was, "Do not use any type of bore cleaner on them as it would melt the plastic." :eek:
Ha ha very true! I remember melting the piss out of the old butler creek 10/22 mags. Any of the clear ones turned cloudy then started getting melty the more it saw gun cleaner. I melted the grips on my POS beretta 22 bobcat that way too.

The good plastic mags aren't affected. Fe the plinkster mags for 15-22 and any of the Walther .22 mags (colt m4, beretta arx160, hk g36, hk416, hammerli tac1, hk mp5). I assume the newer 15-22 mags are ok but wouldn't trust it. That's some cheap and thin plastic they use.
 
I no longer have any semi-auto .22's. But I might change that. I wouldn't mind having another Remington Nylon 66, or a Marlin Model 60
Got the Marlin Model 60:

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The serial number indicates that it was made in 1994 but it hasn't been used much.
 
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I don't think there is any such thing as having too many .22 rifles. I've got a few.
Lately I added this Remington to my .22's, a Model 582. It was free, but I had to disassemble the trigger mechanism, which was frozen up after sitting unused for decades. It had a larger centerfire scope mounted on it, which I removed in order to work on it. I may or may not put that back on. I seem to remember the date code on the bbl. was 1967.

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Picked this up recently. BRO .22. Bascially it is a fancier version of a 10/22, excited to take it out soon and sight it in.

I added the scope, took it off of my ar15 build (yeah, I had this giant silly scope on an ar, more for comedic reliec, but it was also fun to shoot @ distances). Anyways, should be able to plink a squirrel at a decent distance....

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Marlin Model 60, stainless steel with laminated stock, made in late 1990's.

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Thank Heaven they left the gold trigger off.
 
Just picked up my new rimfire race gun the CPFIREARMS MANTIS. This thing is the Bees knees. it works with a Ruger mkIV lower. Comes with vq internals and it is perfectly balanced at the trigger guard. Definitely the nicest 22 I've owned this far and I can't wait to compete with it this year. The rifle above is my CPFIREARMS Dragon fly which is a 10/22 conversion kit it was great but my trigger in my mantis is so much better and and the magazines are a lot more reliable then the rotary mags. And the best part is they are made right here in Oregon!

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