![]() IF there is a stuck bullet waiting in the bore, the next shot is going to be more than a surprise. Then you have to manually eject the fired case and rack the action to load a full power round. As suppressed subsonics are freakin quiet, in a time of stress it may be difficult to notice a squib round. You are then taking a chance by shooting a subsonic round through a potentially dirty barrel, which can cause the bullet to stick in the bore. To switch from one ammo to another you have to rack the action and eject the live round, which then has to be picked up. Quick, versitile, nothing extra to buy, nothing to convert. You put the original mag back in and you now have full powered ammo. You switch mags (to a mag loaded with subsonic ammo) and fire that shot. You need want to fire A shot that absolutely has to be as quiet as possible. ![]() Use them at your own risk - your mileage may vary. Make sure you know what you're doing with reloading before trying these. I probably need to reduce it to 5.3 grains or so.Īll of these were shot in my Savage 10FP with 22" 1:9 barrel using a YHM 5.56 Phantom suppressor. ![]() I did some experimenting and found some other successful 223 loads, as follows: The load fizzled and I had a stuck bullet. I switched to CCI Benchrest primers - DON'T DO THIS. I tried this recipe using some Sierra 55 gr soft point boat tails and it worked fine. I called Hodgdon, and sure enough, they had some suggestions. This ammunition is new production, non-corrosive, in boxer primed re-loadable brass cases.The Accurate S1250 subsonic 223 loads have been discussed before, but I had not seen many other recipes. Every round manufactured is loaded per recommended guidelines and individually inspected to ensure the best possible match grade ammunition is sold. 223 cartridges and at a price you can afford.Ītomic manufacturers all of their ammunition on exacting specifications on commercial grade machinery delivering the accuracy that precision shooters demand. ![]() This relatively innocuous cartridge, with its low recoil and report will serve many shooters, new or experienced, young and old with an alternative target and varmint round to the loud supersonic standard. 223 is also the rifle cartridge of choice for military and law enforcement tactical professionals as well as civilians in over 35 states to use with suppressed firearms because the bullet does not reach or exceed the speed of sound and does not create a loud sonic boom as it travels. It is a perfect round for ranchers to dispatch varmints and predators such as coyotes or bobcats that prey on young calves and small livestock, with a reduced chance of scaring larger animals into a stampede. It can be fired on smaller plots of land that are safe for firing handguns but where a miss with a rifle bullet would likely travel beyond the property, or the use of a full powered rifle load would disturb nearby neighbors. This specialty ammunition is perfect for younger and smaller framed shooters who are learning to shoot their family’s full size hunting rifles, seniors who have become recoil sensitive due to age, persons who only have access to indoor shooting ranges that do not allow high powered rifles because of the noise they generate that echoes off of the walls or fear that the bullet will generate so much power that it will pass through or tear up the backstop. This ammunition is not specifically designed to cycle semi or fully automatic weapons. 22 Long Rifle ammo, has virtually no felt recoil, produces the same energy and power as most 380 ACP ammunition and delivers excellent accuracy out to 100 yards from rifles with barrel twist rates of 1 in 7’’ or faster. Atomic Ammunition’s 223 Remington Subsonic is unlike any.
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