The 10/22 Is The Most Desirable .22 Rifle On The Planet
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- Опубликовано: 24 мар 2020
- Email: Mh355sc@yahoo.com
Matthew Hoover 83631509
FCI Thomson
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Thomson, IL 61285
Kristopher Ervin
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Understand I’m not a lawyer nor have I played one in a movie the things I talk about in my videos are strictly for conversation or entertainment purposes only!
I love the 10/22 I had one in Arizona and it kept me fed when I was out of work. All the teenagers around there had them to. The only thing was the first time I took it completely apart it's a good thing that I put each piece in line on the table because it has a lot of springs and part but as long as you lay them out right it's easy to completely clean every part of this gun. But when the kids saw me do they decided to do it with their 10/22s because they thought running a cloth down the barrel was cleaning until they watch me. I did show them how to do it so they would know how to put theirs back together but the next day all 3 of them showed up with bags full of springs and want me to put guns back together. Lol I guess they didn't listen as well as I thought.
Hahahaha
I can’t believe you even considered the idea that they were listening in the first place
Me as a teenage boy would’ve seen somebody trying to give me instruction as somebody trying to tell me what to do and that’s just not gonna fly
@@CRSFirearms yeah but they asked me to show them the first time so I thought they were paying attention 🤣🤠
That was cool of you. I would have done it too.
Just like any other machine, until you know where the pieces go......
0l0p
Why the 10/22 is popular: Low initial cost of ownership, huge amount of aftermarket parts, inexpensive ammo, stupid reliable, easy to operate and maintain.
“Why the 10/22 is popular, the model 60 sucks”
This video summed up
Thank you sir. After 3 minutes of listening to this guy, I knew some kind fellow would summarize this shit In the comments.
The wildcat interests me alot. Fits the clip from the 10 /22.
not as reliable as you think... The boxy rotorclips are sorta nice but a pain in the butt to clean.
I personally have feeding issues with my mags, including the standard 10rnd mag that came with it.
When I was a boy I went to a dealer looking for a new rifle. The man was a real gunsmith. I was drooling over this AR 15 looking 22 on steroids. That sure would impress my buddies. The old gunsmith said "No son, that ain't what you want." He put a 10/22 in my hands. I remember being skeptical about the rotary clip. Well that was 1977.
Thousands of rounds and shameful abuse. The lack of proper maintenance and proper cleaning is truly embarrassing for me. I knew better.
This weapon never failed me. Not one misfire. Not ever. When mom passed I found that old gun while cleaning out the old house. Took it to a young smith who knows his stuff. She got the works. On the side of the barrel are the words " Made in the 200th year of American Liberty" He gilded that. No extra charge.
Love that he engraved it for free, a true American 🇺🇸
Ruger engraved those firearms in 1976 models not regular gunsmith s .unless he attempted to make a rifle appear to be a centennial model.
@@danielscheller2275 Yes it was already there from factory. He just gilded it which looks really nice.
Got it figured out, now sorry about mixup😉
That’s a great story man.
Inspiring! My dad died when I was 5. I inherited (years later) his 10/22, it's at least 1967 if not older. I've had it for about 40 years and never had it jam. Thanks for confirming what I already thought about this fine rifle. Well done video.
Great rifles, do jam. Shot coyote once, gun ended up jamming every second round while trying put thing out of its misery. Fire, jam, fire, jam.
Learned two things, never use .22 on anything larger than gopher and NEVER buy cheap ammo.
They will misfire and jam, all up to ammo you use not the gun.
You must not shoot much. Every 22 jams
@@benr7002 Try better ammo. Thousands of rounds never jammed.
@Isn't that Rich actually cci mini mag rarely if ever jams. I shoot a lot so I do try to shoot cheap hollow points. Squirrels like them better.
@Bobby Bogart Sounds like Ford vs Chevy. Marlin makes great guns too, but 10-22 over rated? OK.
"this gun has shot pigeon's in the air...while flying" i'm just impressed that you can fly....
LOL..
Lol
I almost spit red beans and rice all over my computer! Lol
🤣🤣🤣
That's good! I didn't catch that! 😁
I believe everything you have said. I have had my gun for 52 years and have fired it constantly every summer and winter. It is my only survival weapon my back up weapon my meat getting weapon. I have been operating the same clip for those fifthTwo years. It has never failed me except when I didn’t clean it and it woodstove pipe. Thank you for letting everyone know how great a 1022 is.
Just inherited a 1965 one from my dad. Hoping to make him proud and may he rest in peace. ❤️
Keep it clean and shoot straight! GodBless!
Your going to love it if you haven't shot it, they are amazing guns and you can get a huge amount of mags and all kinds of accessories for them and they just run!!
My condolences. Sorry for your loss.
Every time you pull that trigger is a salute..🇺🇲
+
I hear you on the Marlin Model 60... I have had mine for 35 ish years. Take it out every other month. Only problem ever was a loose feed tube. My grandfather taught me how to take care of it. PROPERLY. Still a great gun. It comes down to care and knowledge. Love my 10/22 also.
My mom was PISSED when she went out to find all her cloths pins and her line shot to hell!😂😂😂😂😂😂
I bought a Ruger 10/22 last Fall at a Gun Show and I ent into a time warp remembering how much fun a .22 is. I know also own a Colt 22 in the AR Series < I may have gone a bit overboard> and a few months ago a Taurus TX22...which is my fav firearm. Not my EDC, but, my fave firearm just the same.
This was my first rifle, iv put over 20k rounds through mine over the last 20 years. Still makes it on every range trip. Decent ammo and fresh mags is all they ask for.
Ok g k nh
Still have the old 10/22 my Dad taught me to shoot on. Did not appreciate the technology of it until I saw your video. Thanks for the info, 2 thumbs up!
I still have the 10/22 my Dad got for me when i was 13, that was 43 years ago. Still have the paper work for it, was 73 dollars new.
Damn
@@CRSFirearms Mine cost $79.95 in 1973 at K-Mart.
Now, Were they built in America ? 😀
@@joeyoung4121 The gun wasn't cheaper back then, the dollar was worth a lot more. Adjusted for inflation, the gun is actually much cheaper today.
Add in Inflation and thats about the same as the $213 in today's market
I always wanted a 10/22 and about 4 years ago I came by one owned for 22 years by a local farmer who had shot many thousands of rounds through it and he reported that it had NEVER malfunctioned. He traded it in to a friend's gun shop on a take-down version and I got his old traded-in one for very little money. The previous owner had NEVER cleaned it, not once in 22 years. The trigger group was full of crap....old bullet lube and powder residue,.I stripped it right down and cleaned it all up and machined up an adapter to fit a silencer. It fires everything from subsonic to stingers and is astonishingly accurate. It's a wonderful little rifle and I am sure will still be operating long after I am gone.
I can see why they are so popular...... I have two other .22s, an old Springfield bolt gun, and a Remington Nylon 66.... both fine rifles, but the little Ruger is kind of the 'go to' .22. The barrel is easy to remove and replace too..... Brilliant....
Having bought a used Ruger magazine recently that had feeding issues, I found that the spring tension is important....
My 10/22 is my favorite rifle. I have gone a bit nuts on customizing it though. I now have almost $2,000 in it including accessories. I wanted to point out that 10/22 magazines (BX 15s and 25s) need a break in period. For mine it was about 100 - 200 rounds per magazine and never have issues since. The ammo brand is another factor. It doesn't like Remington Golden Bullets but loves anything CCI. Another cheap part to replace as soon as you buy one is the bolt buffer pin. The receiver housing is aluminum and the bolt slamming back against the buffer pin will eventually waller out the hole the pin fits into. Buy a polymer one for around $10 and it will keep that problem from happening. It also gets rid of the annoying ping sound and smooths out the action some. Also, use a torque screwdriver on the takedown screw when putting it back together. On a polymer stock it's 40 lbs. If not the accuracy is effected every time you clean it. I shoot mine almost every week, 500 rounds per trip.
Im from sweden and even a ,22 powder burner needs a license and it all goes over the "not so easy" hunters degree here. But i shot a 10/22 abroad and it´s also the only riffle in 22LR i ever shot, but decided to grind through the hunters degree and get a 22 LR. And for me it´s only one, the 10/22. for me it´s almost a "plattform" with all the customization available. so really appreciated this episode. thanks from "up north" :D
Got mine in 1971. Seen a buttload of ammo over the years. Still an awesome tack driver. By far my most favorite weapon. Grandson hopes he will get it someday.
He took a break from guns to chase girls. Now we know why he came back to guns.
correct, this guy is a fool
@@rickmarlar4708, got any commentary to back up your assertion?
Smart man,
The same thing happened to me.
Same here 3rd grade to high school almost every day 50 rds
Had no idea about the two ejectors. Thanks for the knowledge! I've had my 10/22 since I was 11 and I still have much to learn about it.
Everyone has one. They’re cheap, easily customizable, reliable, accurate, fun to shoot and easy to maintain.
Plus, if you bought it used, you can shoot it for 10 years and sell it for what you paid for it. One of the all time great firearms.
"Chasing girls" can turn out to be a lot more expensive than firearms and ammo. Love my Ruger 10/22, very accurate and reliable!!
Chasing girls is a waste of time - they will come to you when they learn you are a stable human being who can protect and provide for.
Oh yeah, try chasing a girl with your Ruger if you wanna see real expensive.
I've always said it doesn't pay to rent when you can when it comes to a home, but for girls, I tell young people it's the exception - it pays to rent.
My first gun was a 410/22 over under. I loved that little gun. I was 9 years old my 2 older brothers had single shot 12 gauges. I felt like king shit with 2 different calibers
Nice
I HAD A STEVENS 22/410 I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO IT
I have a Savage 24 Series S in 410/22LR that my youngest grandson wants, I think I’ll give it to him when he graduates high school.
@@oldnumber5866 I still have my Savage .22/410. Still hunt rabbits with it. I got mine at ten years old (1960). There isn't a tin can around that is safe on "plinkin' range day" ! I love that gun.
My house got broken into and my Stevens WWII 410/22 was stolen.I want one again.That 22 was so accurate!
Was always a Model 60 guy. Had an old used one that I personally put a six figure round count through. It was ancient and rusty when I got it. Never really had an issue with it.
Bought the boys a pair of 10-22s for Christmas one year. After we played with those for a couple of years, I get it. We have several 10-22 rifles now. Model 60 Marlins are no longer in the mix. Too complicated to be as cheap as they are, and the Rugers are too strong to have to worry about.
Glad I made the change.
Smith and Wesson MP15-22's are pretty sweet as well. I've owned one of the newer ones for a few years and so far it is fun and functional. It shoots everything I load in it, even low velocity and quiet rounds. I have not had one misfeed or stovepipe. Tiny groups, light weight, reliable, easy to clean, and It takes most AR upgrades which is fun. (Edit: I did replace the extractor and firing pin with aftermarket from TandomKross before ever firing it, not sure if that's why my specific gun is so reliable.)
Its funny how you described the use of gun cabinets and being raised with them. I'm 51 and still have two. The crazy thing (according to anti gunners) is that no one died.
I built dad one for shop class, 😁
@@chuckd.7048 I remember when schools used to HAVE shop classes.
Gun cabinets my gun cabinet is the floor of the bedroom closet. Caught my 4 and 5 year old nieces look at the 22s it was winter time. I took them to where I went shooting. I ask them which was harder the frozen ground or their belly. They said the frozen ground. Then I showed them the little 22 bullet and ask if they thought this could hurt them and they said no. Then I helped them to hold the 22 and fire about ten rounds in the frozen ground in front of them. When they seen the large hole in the ground in front of them they never look at my 22s again. That is proper gun safety training for kids.
I shot competition with marlin 60s as a kid and never had a failure. I have 2 60s one early 70s and a late 80s both my kids shoot and still no issues.
I have a Glenfield Squirrel 71, an 83 18 shot, an 85 papoose and a 2015 "remlin 60...
Very good, informative video. While I consider myself more of a collector than a shooter, I do enjoy working on my guns. I own a Marlin/Glenfield 60 and a couple of 10/22's and do see that there is a considerable difference. Not only is the Ruger easier to work on, it also offers some other advantages. One advantag3e is that a jig is available to drill a cleaning rod hole in the back of the receiver to prevent damage to the rifling near the muzzle. This hole will not show when the receiver is in the stock, and it can be tapped for a plug screw. Another advantage is the soft buffer accessory that installs behind the bolt.
I also have an old Marlin 336 SC in .219 Zipper which I really liked until I bought my first Henry Big Boy and found out how much easier the Henry is to take down and reassemble. While older Marlins were great, the newer ones, not so much.
My dad bought me a 10/22 as my first firearm in 1965 at Fed Mart (remember them?). It has a cherry wood stock and a five digit serial number. That gun has never messed a beat. I liked the gun particularly because it resembles an M1 carbine. My dad also added a Weaver scope (made right here in my home town) and a sling. Great gun!
you must be from El Paso? weaver scopes was a big employer there back then. and I do remember Fed Mart.
@@markmoorhead1442 Yup.
Weaver scopes are awesome scopes,,, not sure where there made ?? Fed mart ? Never heard of them at all
@@bustersmith5569 Originally in El Paso, TX, by Bill Weaver.
My compliments on your achievements. Aerial Gunnery is a challenge. It is a perishable skill set that will elude you as you age. Stay your course young man. You have many lessons to share with those willing to listen. My sincerest compliments.
You wanna see cool? I will show you cool.. The aftermarket folding stock from Archangel (QBD) allows a traditional 1022 to fold up conveniently AND switch out barrels like a champ. I don't know why the 2A community hasn't made a big deal about this. I have owned one for about a year now and love it. Great job on the video by the way, other than nomenclature flubs, the content was solid. If you really do like to use your 1022, this stock will put your favorite little rimfire back onto your list of regular, everyday firearms. Of course you will probably start looking around for a target barrel and an optic.
Thank you
The only thing I’m going to do is get a crap load of 25rd mags and shoot up the countryside
Dude, I subscribed just on your "clear the jam" recommendation at ~ 10:30. You're obviously a knowledgeable pro but thanks for the levity !
thx for this. you just made me feel really good about buying one of these. i went to the shop to buy a handgun, but decided to add this on when the shop keeper told me this was the most desirable 22 rifle on the market. i love shooting rifles at the range so decided to get it. i took his word for it being great and i'm glad i did.
Gave both my 10/22s to my oldest kids when I bought my Henry Goldenboy. It's buttery smooth for a lever gun and digests .22 short to long rifle flawlessly.
What was it exactly that made you make the change?
I agree with your points on the Ruger, as I’ve got one, but I also have a model 60 since 1983 that’s been flawless. 2 awesome examples for sure. Good day and God bless.
Thanks
My 80s model 60 is from back when they held 18rds
Never fired a Marlin m60. Back when I was young my Dad has a Win m250 laver action, my Uncle, a bolt action Marlin. When I was 13, 2 boys who lived across the highway had a Browning .22 Automatic Rifle. I noticed, while firing it that it was kinda slow. Turns out their Grandfather, who had bought it new, never cleaned it. And neither did they! They didn’t know how to take it apart. Well, it was a Take-Down model! So I removed the barrel. Pulled a couple of pins in the action (after I removed the spring return tube from stock), pulled the action out & cleaned the hell out of it. & the receiver. One of them cleaned the barrel. Put it back together, loaded it, went out the back door & fired into their Grandfathers impact area (had a 25 yd range right off the back porch)! What did you do to it?!? I said I cleaned it! You just fired full automatic!!! “No I didn’t.” So they reloaded and fired it. Well, apparently, it turned out, I could move my trigger pretty fast! It wasn’t all that fast, but whatever that rifle’s rpm rate was. I could unload the 11-22LR rnds in about 3-4 seconds.
The younger brother practiced for a week and could match my rate of fire. At 50 ft, either of us could empty 11 rnds into an NRA official 50 ft 22rimfire target, in the black! His brother could put 11rnds in the black, but his rate of fire was 2-3 seconds per shot. My brother would miss the “target” 4-6 times out of 11 shots. He was good at baseball & football!
We had another friend who had a Rem Nylon 66 stock fed, like the Browning. That was a great.22 automatic also.
When I got out of the Marines in ‘81, I moved to Austin, TX. Looking for a .22 auto, the only Brownings & Rugers I could find were new. Didn’t have enough money. I started looking in pawn shops. I found a Remington Nylon 67, removable box magazines, for $65. It only had 1-6rnd mag. He said he could order more if I wanted some. I said Yes! Turns out it used the same mags as a Rem 52(I think that’s correct). I could get 6 or 10 rnd mags. 6 were $3.74 each, 10 rnd $4.45 each. I had $20. I got 4 of the 10rnd mags. Went home & cleaned it, then went to range to some shooting. Damn, couldn’t miss! I had that .22 for 11 years. Then it got stolen! Police never found it. Probably didn’t even look. Anyway, I rambled on enough here. Good Video! Thank you!
They are excellent rifles. His review seemed a bit biased. The model 60 to many is the one of the greatest .22 rifles ever made.
I've had my 10/22 since the 80s. Still rocking. Hard to argue with all these points.
One of my first rifles, I have the Bicentennial Edition from 1976. Looks great, shoots great. Saving it for upcoming grandkids!
Loved it so much, I got the Mini-14, my go to rifle (tactical edition).
Every gun is good if it works for you.
I spent so many evenings shooting clothes pins off the line, LMAO when you said that, my mother hated that gun.
I had one once and it was a tack driver with CCI Stingers. My squirrel rifle. Guess I'll have to get one soon
I have always had a love for the model 60 due to it being my childhood gun but I have to say.... your right. Great content. Thank you
Always loved shooting .22 and i grew up with my first being a marlin model 60, i loved it. Was a fun gun and super accurate with the 4x scope on top. Looking back i guess i didnt notice any of the flaws because i never cleaned it. Later on in life i got back into shooting .22 and the marlin had done exactly as described in this video, it was just locked up. I ended up trading it off for 3 25 round magazines for a new ruger 10/22 and never looked back. I currently own 2 ruger 10/22's a stock carbine and a heavily modded steel challenge rig. Both perform flawlessly.
"If there's girls watching...."
Ronald Soderberg 🤣😂🤣
Lol
#boss
That one had me laughing my ass off
I think no fear!.
One of the best videos I’ve seen in a while, full of actual information! Thanks
Thanks
Don’t have to tell me. I love these things. They work, they have 25rd mags, everyone makes parts/extras, and they run suppressed very well.
Back to support ya buddy. Oldie but a goodie.
Mine got trashed. Waterbed sprung a leak while I was on vaxca, 1022 swam underwater for a week and a half! Stripped it, cleaned off the rust and went right back 100% on shitty federal and the bx25's. Done and done. Kick ass.
Got one I bought used in 1996. I have no idea how many tens of thousands of rounds have gone through it. Rescoped it once. Still pops golf balls at 100 yds. Absolutely the best .22 for everything except maybe the Olympics. Great video - thank you for the enlightenment about the 60 - my buddy who loves his will lose our next argument!
Haha right on
Had mine since 1975. Still going strong. The AK of 22’s.
Absolutely right! The Ruger 10/22 IS the AK-47 of .22 rimfire!
I've had my 10 22 since 75, and I believe the only thing I replaced the extractor springs. They really almost never ever fail.
Because the Ruger 10/22 is so popular, you also ha a ton of aftermarket options available (trigger upgrades, stocks, lasers, etc.).
I have a large rimfire collection. Kept three 10/22's. One a sporter, two liberty models,all with walnut ,non sporters have steel buttplates. The older the better ,generally, on rimfires. I don't have anything bad to say about ruger, or older Marlins.
The thing you call "Extractor" at time 19:35 is actually ejector. The extractor is in the bolt on the right side to claw case out of the barrel
Come on man!
I was going to put i the same comment, but I wont be redundant.
Ejector is on the magazine
I used to buy cases of .22 ammo and take my 10/22 out on weekends. I had a BMF activator that pulls the trigger 4 times for every turn of a crank on it. It was normal for me to put 3,000 rounds of ammo through it using 50 round magazines in one day. I did this for many years on weekend outings. I never had a failure. Amazing what you do if you have money and no girlfriend.😁 My rifle still works as good as new. Now my wife and daughter shoot it and they love it!
The first part of your talk you were talking about the “ejector” not “extractor”.
A long time ago one of my neighbors gave me some .22LR ammo he found in the attic. It was Winchester in a blue and yellow box, which I'd never seen before. I think they sold that in the 1930s and '40s, and this was the late '70s. Anyway, I was shooting this OLD ammo in my 10/22 and started having failures to eject. When I looked at the bolt I saw that the extractor and its spring and plunger were gone! I picked up some of the brass and looked at it, and found some ruptured cases, including one that had a big piece of the rim sticking out sideways. The gun still worked most of the time without an extractor. The cases blew back into the ejector and it kept on going for 9 rounds out of 10. I ordered the 3 parts I needed from Ruger, cheap, and looked at the exploded view drawing in my owners manual to figure out how it went together. It was a piece of cake. I still have that gun, which cost about $63 and change IIRC, back in the '70s when my dad bought it for me, AND it came with a real walnut stock. The stock is now worth more than what the gun cost, and I'm not even using it. I have a Butler Creek folding stock on it. The 10/22 is like LEGO for adults. You can take it apart and put it back together as something so different it's hard to recognize.
My first 22 was a Remington nylon 66, got it $50 at pawn shop at the age of 10. I was super happy. The history of the nylon 66 is amazing.
That's a collector gun now. Hope you still have it
@@jeffreyhall2136 I was a kid and traded it for a marlin, if I had known that today it would have been so sought after I never would have gotten rid of it.
I loved my Remington ~ Nylon 66 ~ .22 LR fantastic rifle. Still have it with my Colt Woodsman
My grandpa used to say, An empty wagon makes a lot of noise
*Was sitting here watching the Vid and the very same thought crossed my mind...Some people will never understand that just because you can, doesn't mean you should*
Loved my Marlin growing up! Made me into a great shot. Got my father a Ruger 10-22 and I'm gonna buy one soon because of your video.
Love the video. Additionally, the flush-fitting rotary magazines are brilliant. It doesn't get in the way and the mag is protected. I would like to get a 10/22 take-down.
Thanks
You forgot to mention the #1 reason Ruger has out performed everything else in this class for decades. The Flaming Eagle is magic. It just isn't fair. Great episode 🤘
Marlin probably makes more money lol
Marlin 60 is more accurate, have outshot every 10/22 target shooting!
lol crack me up with the manual bullet extraction 😂😂
I bought one in the 60s when I was 12 or 13. They were popular because they resembled the 30 cal carbine which every kid wanted. The rotary clip was a big deal and the fact that the receiver was milled from a solid block of steel made it hard to beat.
Yeah I've never been a big fan of tube fed weapons for the exact reason you said about potentially getting your hand over a hot weapon. I've also been looking into 10/22's / Ruger Chargers for a little bit now, I'll be picking up one or the other for sure in the near future.
Right on
Learn how to load it correctly!
"Its the most desireable" because it let you put your finger in its mag well once and now you're hooked.
Lost me with a screwdriver or knife on what sounded like live rimfire cartridge
@@undeserved1781 ok bud
I have a 44 carbine and I was trying to retrieve my piece out of it, and my finger was in there and the top right half of my index finger got wrecked
@@camerongoltz5578 Don't ever put it in unprotected.
Moron
I have a 1897 Trench and a few trapdoor Civil War, some of other weapons guns etc. but I had forgotten I had the 10-22 and while deciding to take them all down and do some repair on the Win 69 and 69A (stripped breech bolt handle), I had shot a lot as a kid, I saw that 10-22 that I'd only shot once decades ago. REALLY cool rifle, took it completely apart,cleaned and successfully put it back together. Wow so much I could add on to it. Don't have much of anywhere to shoot anything I own in my area of WLA without taking a long trip out of town but when I do I'll have some fun with it.
Bro this was hilarious. The analogies did me in. 🤣🤣🤣
Read the title thinking "finally some credit for the .22"
Got my sub
Thanks
When I turned 10 I got a model 60, 2 years later when my sister turned 10 she got a 10/22.... I was always jealous. Now I’m much older and my favorite 22 is MY 10/22! I did just get my son (10) a Henry 22 and both of us love it too!
Menin Black I love my 10/22 and also my Henry. Good choices.
Love the 10/22. When it does fail to the point where you can’t fix it yourself, it’s cheaper to just get a new one.
But it won't unless you need a new barrel, and why not just upgrade? You can do a barrel swap easily, just don't put a carbon wrapped piece on it, he has a clip on that as well.
I have a Talo Distributor Exclusive 10/22 with a Mannlicher stock, my favorite version of the gun.
I also have a Marlin Glenfield Model 60 that was made around 1983, bought it off GunBroker for ~$80.
Thing was well used and still took years to break on me. I love both rifles.
I had a henry 22 lever action. I prefer it to the 10/22 any day of the week and twice on Sunday. I regret having my dad sell it. I need to pick one up soon.
I like the Henry also, but a 10/22 literally saved my Dad's life one day when a feral dog spotted him on the trail. It began snarling and my dad took aim just in case. Well, it decided to try it's luck, and Dad won, literally pumping every shot into him before he fell 15 yards in front of him. The Henry wouldn't have been able to pull that off.
Haha, I found a Marlin 60 in a dumpster in the 90’s throwing lawn clippings away in a shady apartment complex. The tube was missing and I never invested the time in repairing it.
Lol nice find
Cheep fix, under $50 in parts. Go for it!
My first purchase was a marlin 60 at a young age. I now have 4 10/22’s and a Henry lever 22. When my uncle died, I got his 1972 and got rid of the M60. His 10/22 is the first gun I ever shot. Later I bought a camo 10/22 take down with a threaded barrel. Later bought a 50th anniversary mossy oak take town with thread barrel and stainless finish. Bought the 2020 collectors series vote red white and blue a couple weeks ago. It has a rear peep site and three blade front sight like an m14. It has the American flag stock and threaded barrel. I probably have 4 million rounds down the throats of 10/22’s. Never once had a firing pin issue. I did have an extractor issue on the original 10/22 years ago from the same thing of lack of cleaning. Only failure I’ve ever had other than misfires from Remington Ammo. I miss those days of Walmart 7.99 bricks of federals
I will continue to watch your videos to support you and your family! Especially keep putting out the videos that will help you!
If i was into auto loading .22 lr rifles i would already own one. But i like bolt .22's so I went with the ruger american in .22lr
A, "Trench Gun" is a shotgun. Yes, the, "trench gun" has killed birds!
"You eat shit once..." LMAO idk why that got me good
From what I've seen, I've always liked the marlin 60 design along with it's 15 round magazine (not to mention the beautiful walnut stock on the one I saw in person) but I can't argue with a man who obviously knows a hell of a lot more on the topic than I do! Great video!
I've never shot a Marlin model 60, but I have a Marlin model 88 and it has been super reliable for me. With its buttstock tube feed, it eliminates one of the issues the video has with the 60. Also it can hold 15 + 1 in the chamber for 16 rounds total. And man that walnut stock is beautiful!
@@rowhsv I just started really getting into firearms a few years ago but grew up around them, was shooting as early as I can remember and have always had something for home defense. Honestly, it could have been the 88 that I shot, just went off appearance in the video and assumed. Now I'm genuinely curious, it's my mom's so maybe she still has the instructions and stuff that came with it. Only thing that I know for sure is that it's a marlin and was purchased around 2012 give or take a year or 2. I'll have to ask next time I visit.
You were right, easyly the best explanation why the 10/22 is so good. Thanks for your work.
Thanks
I'm very pleased with my Marlin 60.
That's right and right off the shelf much more accurate than a 10/22 I've owned one ,and not impressed by no means. Trigger pull is awful, and accuracy is poor
They are great guns learn to shoot with one and shot competition as a kid with one and my kids all learned to shoot with them
I love my Marlin 60 too, super reliable, and super accurate, but they are more susceptible to gumming up, and people tend to bend the extractor wire when putting the bolt back on. that is the main issue I have had with those. Also, they are hander to clean, but cleaning a gun is therapy for me :)
Chris Lewis I would not buy a new one either. I’ve had a couple, both from the 80’s or early 90’s when then still had the longer barrel and higher capacity.
Mike R I tend to agree. Having had both, I prefer the 10/22 more than the 60
Regarding Dry firing and potential damage from that, The plastic drywall anchors size #4 are almost a perfect fit as snap caps for .22lr, and last much longer than the hard plastic ones you buy at the gun store.
Dry firing a 10 22 will not damage it. Not good to do it in any gun but that is what I read.
@@garnetanderson8472 Yep, it's in the manual.
I’m sold on the design. And I have one. Great to see you with a great amount of subscribers
I have a model 60 that I've pumped thousands of rounds through and never had a problem. The 10/22 is damn good rifle but I've just had really good luck with my model 60 that I've just never felt the need to get one.
Bx25s beat tube fed all day. But model 60 is a beast of a gun.
@Timothy Randolph yes I understan,but dose it matter now that ruger bought marlin?
Remington bought them
I like my marlin 60 1977 model just gave it a few new springs they are amazing rifles
@@johnhamre990 yeah, sometimes you got to do that, I totally agree they are great little rifles
'if there are girls watching you can...' rofl subscribed!
my family and I have been looking into a ruger 10/22 takedown with the magpul stock for it so we can fit it in the bug out/bug in bag, about 500 rounds or so could fit in the bag too... thank you for the breakdown!
I didn't buy a 10/22 until 2006, that I kept at my cabin for the family to plink with. It came with a cheap BSA Red Dot. Still have it.
In 2009 I bought one and seriously customized it. The only thing original on it is the receiver. With the 3x9 scope it shoots ragged hole 5 shot groups.
For the last 6 months I've been looking for a Charger 22 but no where had any, online or in town. Today, I went to my LGS and asked if he could order one for me and he pulls out a model 4924 Take Down. I didn't want a Take Down and it was priced over MSRP. Then I went a pawn shop / gun store to see if they could order a 4923 or 4938. To my amazement they had a new 4923 for less than MSRP. This and two bricks of CCI Mini Mags, is my Xmas present to myself. The 10/22 is a great design.
Glad to see you're back in good humor.
Thanks
Hell yeah...how can you hold/shoot a 10/22 and not smile! It's a perfect cure when you feel down.
The one thing I tell people when they are looking at 22s is I heavily recomend the 10/22 not cus of the aftermarket or customer service at ruger, but on 2 spicific things.
1. Its reliable as hell
2. Its dead simple to take apart and deep clean every part. The trigger group is ridiculously simple to tear down compared to other designs.
Right on
I totally dropped the ball I’m breaking up with Customerservice in the video dammit
DORORO defiantly compared to let's say a Marlin 22 tube fed rifle.
They blew up the design years ago to make a 357 and 44 Magnum. The deerstalker and the deerslayer. Recently they have taken that design from 9 mm rifle to 9 mm submachine gun looking pistol that accepts Glock magazines and folding braces.
I’ve had nothing but trouble with my 10/22 actually, my last 2 rugers.
@@jamessroga3114 what kinda troubles?
My dad has an oldschool 10/22 while mine is polymer. What's great is all the parts are still the same decades later and can easily be swapped. My brother on the other hand went with a takedown model which is also pretty nice, but not as easily interchangable.
Love Ruger's quality! I have a couple 10/22 s. 30-06 bolt action and a 44mg Super Blackhawk. Trigger pulls have gotten much better now. I love Ruger so much I have the Ruger eagle tattoo on my leg.
i have shot a few 10 22s but keep going back to my mod60, i have also never had to replace anything other than the buffer on it. it has had 1000s of rounds thru it over the last 40 years
Absolutely love my Marlin 60
Love my Marlin 60, thousands and thousands of rounds through it over 35 years. Never a problem.
I have a magazine fed model 60 I bought it over 20 years ago and it was used and the only time it has ever failed was being dirty, not oiled or crappy ammo. I did give it to my brother and bought a 10/22 but I bought a model 60 tube fed for my son because they are reliable.
I must be sold on the design as I own 3. One is my first rifle from when I was 8 or so. The second I bought when the take-down model came out, and I recently got an 80's stainless model with a laminate stock used, but in excellent shape. I think I am gonna send the first one back to Ruger to get refinished and make it look new again. 40 years of use and it looks great except for some rust it picked up in storage at some point.
I notice you are old enough to have one with a metal buttplate too! NICE!
I have a 1976 bicentennial 10/22. It's just awesome. I've had it for 37 years, probably put 50,000 rounds through it, and never had one problem. Like not one. No feed issues, no ejector issues, it eats any 22 round you put in it, long, long rifle, short, subsonic, I've even made some hot loads (basically 22lr+p) it has no problem with them. It's been dropped, sunk, battered, beaten, lost, found, burned, left in a closet to rust for 10 years and it's still just fine, hell, it still has the original barrel and trigger group. Best rifle ever created by man.
Since I like to hike and camp. I went with the backpack model of 10/22. Love the tack driving accuracy.
I ruck mine through the deep woods occasionally, and my only complaint is that the front sight is very angular and always gets hung up on briars as I am walking through the brush. and i wish the bolt was stainless. But other than that, It has served me quite well.
I've never had one looking forward to getting one ... After the shelves restock...
They should be restocking pretty soon
I’m imagining it probably takes three weeks or so after distributor put in an order to receive the order and then 1 to 2 weeks for shipping
So I’m guesstimating 5 to 6 weeks after the panic started you should see inventory start rolling back in
Cliff Thomas Went to the gun shop today, plenty of ammo, thousands of rounds of every caliber and guns available, you wouldn’t think anything was wrong walking into any store here.
I love Montana!
Rabbi they are a bit pot metal and the polymer stocks are plasticity and the wood furniture is about as good as an old 2x6 but that’s not where it counts. Barrel and bolt plus the magazine is where they count. You are on point about every gun owner should have one, I have two myself. A plastic take down and a stainless, laminated stock in green and red that looks half like a Christmas tree. (Actually a pretty good stock.)
I've never owned a 10-22 myself, I bought the marlin 60 back in the day
If they ever do. Trust me, you'd do better finding an older all metal one at a pawn shop. The new ones are not as good.
I love this guy’s knowledge!!!
I'm 54 and got my 10-22 when I was 14. It is still an absolute tack driver. Best built rifle I have ever owned. Much to the chagrin of many, many cottontails...
The marlin 60 vs ruger 10 22 argument..... I solved that by owning both. Plus some old mossbergs.👍
Hahah right on
I have a couple old Mossbergs myself a 151 and a 152.
Marlin 60-99c Mossberg 142A and JC Higgins single shot 22 bolt here. Marlin I boughy new in 1970 and is still going strong along with the others that I've owned even longer. My go -to is the Marlin.
I have both as well. Never had a problem with either. My kids love the 10/22. So I get the marlin 60 most of the time. Both shoot very accurate. And ... Yes you can hit a pigeon in air or on a silo. Just sayin...
Several years ago I saw a used Mossberg 380 in a gun store and had to buy it because it looked almost like the Wards Western Field .22, that was my first gun. It's great because of the memories, but not much else.
Have a Glennfield Marlin 10 single shot that I have had since it was new 56 years ago and STILL to this day NEVER a problem. Actually just restored the stock and it is just a wonderful piece that has hunted every varmint that there is on our horse farm in Pa. and continues to this very day.
I love it, problem is that in the Netherlands you are not allowed to buy a semi auto rifle/carbine as your first weapon ( after being a full member for a year of a shootingclub and have at least 18 times done shooting (with a weapon from the club). So my first weapon is the Ruger American Rimfire LRT, and to be true, I’m loving it.
There was this guy I knew who didn't lock his gun cabinet, but kept a couple of boxes of ammunition for the rifles with them, in the cabinet. The primers were marked red, and the cases were filled with Red Dot. He (and his family) knew what the red primers meant. Yeah, I put thousands of rounds through my 10-22 also (mine had the "sporter" stock without the barrel band).