Smith 22A back up for bullseye?
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, Isabel1130
Smith 22A back up for bullseye?
Hello.
I am still new to bullseye and I am shooting a Ruger MKIII for .22. I am looking for an affordable back up .22 in case mine developes an unresolvable problem during a match. ( I know the Ruger is a reliable work horse, it is Mr. Murphy I am worried about !!))
The Smith model 22A has adjustable target sights and a scope rail for later red dot mounting, but I don't know anything about it other than it is very affordable.
Is anyone out there familiar with this pistol? Accuracy, reliability, feeding and temperment etc. My other choice was a Browning Buckmark.
Thanks for any responses... magi
I am still new to bullseye and I am shooting a Ruger MKIII for .22. I am looking for an affordable back up .22 in case mine developes an unresolvable problem during a match. ( I know the Ruger is a reliable work horse, it is Mr. Murphy I am worried about !!))
The Smith model 22A has adjustable target sights and a scope rail for later red dot mounting, but I don't know anything about it other than it is very affordable.
Is anyone out there familiar with this pistol? Accuracy, reliability, feeding and temperment etc. My other choice was a Browning Buckmark.
Thanks for any responses... magi
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I had one ... Sold it.
It was a good gun... not great I would not bother buying one as a backup.
It did not have a great trigger, it also had feed issues.
there are very few aftermarket upgrades made for it.
IMO save the green and if you have a failure borrow or dsq.
If you really want a backup look for a used Ruger Mark2 or 3
It was a good gun... not great I would not bother buying one as a backup.
It did not have a great trigger, it also had feed issues.
there are very few aftermarket upgrades made for it.
IMO save the green and if you have a failure borrow or dsq.
If you really want a backup look for a used Ruger Mark2 or 3
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The S&W 22A is more of a decent "plinker" if you will, and is generally not considered a bullseye-quality pistol. I agree with the others comments. If you use a backup pistol, you should use a pistol that you are familiar with that will minimize mid-match adjustments should you have a primary gun malfunction.
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