center fire vs. rapid fire
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center fire vs. rapid fire
what are the differences between these 2 styles and guns?
thanks in advance dam
thanks in advance dam
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Re: center fire vs. rapid fire
The courses of fire are totally different requiring different techniques and skills. The basics, squeeze the sights and watch the trigger (just joking), are however the samedam8 wrote:what are the differences between these 2 styles and guns?
thanks in advance dam
The guns are similar apart from one being centrefire and the other being .22LR.
Other than that though I am not certain what your question is.
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- Posts: 5617
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AS Rob said, Rapid Fire is now shot with .22LR so if you want to shoot according to the ISSF rules .22 short is a non-starter.Anonymous wrote:I am an informal shooter and have always wanted a nice 22 for target shooting. I have shot many 22 lr. but no 22 shorts. Is one more accurate than another?. Is one easier to handle than the other? and is one more problematic than the other? thanks dam
As for your other questions:-
1) As a generalisation .22LR is more accurate than .22 short, even at 25m range.
2) The "old rules" .22 short Rapid Fire pistols with their reduced recoil, ported barrels, unlimited trigger weight and back-bar grips were probably easier to handle than a .22LR Standard Pistol.
3) The "old rules" .22 short Rapid Fire pistols were probably more problematic than any other ISSF pistols.
Back to the earlier point, there is no longer an ISSF event for .22 short. You will be able to buy a second-hand one extremely cheaply but that will not help if you want to shoot ISSF matches.
All the .22 short RF pistols were fickle. Often very fickle. You can tell a RF shooter from the torrent of first-rate profanity that erupts about every third or fourth string. It doesn't matter which one you use.
This was one of the big reasons why they went to .22 LR for RF. Right now, the only use for a .22 short would be to slap a Walther GSP trigger into an OSP and use it as a 50-foot bullseye gun.
This was one of the big reasons why they went to .22 LR for RF. Right now, the only use for a .22 short would be to slap a Walther GSP trigger into an OSP and use it as a 50-foot bullseye gun.
I disagree. The Walther OSP and Pardini GP/GPS were very reliable pistols.All the .22 short RF pistols were fickle. Often very fickle. You can tell a RF shooter from the torrent of first-rate profanity that erupts about every third or fourth string. It doesn't matter which one you use.
The reason the ISSF changed the rules to .22lr was both to try to encourage more people to shoot Rapid Fire and because there was basically only 2 companies left (Fiocchi and RWS) that were prepared to manufacture quality .22short ammo (which was also expensive).