REMINDER = BOLT ACTION RIFLE ARE EVEN BETTER AT MID-TO LONG RANGE ] ....Though SEMI AUTO RIFLE are ACCURATE ,,,,,,but are not as PRECISE as a BOLT ACTION RIFLE.........
We were talking about .22 LR here, weren't we? What's your definition of mid to long range for a .22 LR? What kind of precision are you looking for that can't be delivered by a semi-auto over a bolt when using .22 LR ammo. This might sound facetious but If you are using KF, I guarantee almost any semi-auto will be able to deliver more accuracy that the ammo will be capable of.
U need to clean , lubricate , a Semi Auto each and every time you are done with shooting.
Says who? You can run a truly large amount of ammo through a .22 (without cleaning it) semi-auo before it will start to malfunction. Some of the farms out here have .22 LR tube-fed semi-auto rifles that were probably made when FDR was president and have seen very little cleaning.
..Thus things will rust,chamber rust,,gas system clog if not kept clean..
While have handled a few .22 LR semi-auto rifles, I have never seen a gas operated .22 LR.
And in canada or USA dont have dust for excample in USA / Canada if you wash your car once and u dont need to wash it for 15 days but in india u just take ur car ones from ur Village home ad go to for a short drivving means just drive it for 15 KMS u may need to wash it or clean the dirt,
I'd like to dispel one misconception here. You have been watching too much TV if you don't think there is no dust in America or Canada. As for washing my car, I'm very lucky if I make it a week with the car looking like it hasn't been washed recently. You forget that both America and Canada have huge land masses of which the cities occupy but a very small portion of. We also drive in the country, where not all the roads are perfect. Dust and dirt are par for the course if you are out hunting. Legally you can't hunt or shoot out of doors in most cities so your firearms are going to be exposed to dust and dirt when you take them out into the field.
you even tubuler magzine .22 riffle have problems in india such as BSA or any other brand with tubuler mag, that is beacuse we do have lot of dust blowing when we go to hunt or practice u just cant put into its cover and take it out when u see some birds, i have gone with these problems with a tubuler mag riffle but
If your tubular mag is so dirty that it has problems feeding, you need to get off your lazy butt and clean it. Don't blame the design for a failure on the owners part. There are still tubular magazine rifles in use that were made in the depression and before that give perfect service.
You have made numerous pronouncements here about semi-auto rifles that are just not true. New members here are going to get incorrect information about firearms and that is contrary to the purpose of this forum. With your average .22 LR rifle, for all practical purposes, you will not find much accuracy differences between the a semi-auto and a bolt provided you maintain them with a modicum of common sense. Also as Baljit pointed out, the age of the rifle doesn't have much to do with it. I see numerous people mention the age of firearms available in India. Guns don't go bad if they are old. In fact many shooters believe that the care and quality that went into making the firearms of yesteryear are not duplicated in many of today's machine made firearms.
One of my semi-auto .22 LR rifles is now about 27 years old, has never had any parts replaced and it still functions as well as the day it was purchased. Believe me it has had a large amount of ammo through it. You have to try very hard to wear out a .22 LR rifle whether it is a bolt or semi-auto.
“Never give in, never give in, never; never; never; never – in nothing, great or small, large or petty – never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense” — Winston Churchill, Oct 29, 1941