Brownells Česká republika - Světově největší dodavatel součástek zbraní, zbrojního vybavení a příslušenství. Česká republika
850005375036 749018842
According to Derek Peterson, president of Peterson Cartridge, “We decided to build the tooling to make .22 Creedmoor brass in response to the uptick in long-distance predator and varmint hunting. Plus the round is just straight-up fun to shoot. It is a low-recoil, flat shooting, wind-bucking round; deadly accurate up to 800 yards.” Peterson Cartridge also makes 6.5 and 6mm Creedmoor casings. “But when we designed the tooling for the .22 Creedmoor we set out to make casings with improved features,” Peterson stated. “And we were successful. We increased the head hardness to tolerate higher pressures. And we increased our internal volume slightly to work better with the slow burning powders (like RL 26, or H1000) which people favor for this round.” Prior to this, shooters had to take 6mm or 6.5 Creedmoor casings and neck them down to .22. There are a few problems with necking down. When you take a larger caliber with the correct neck wall thickness and neck it down to a smaller caliber, that excess brass bunches up in the neck. It creates a tension band, what some people call a doughnut of brass in the neck, which has a negative effect on loading, bullet release and accuracy. A trait of cartridge brass is that it work-hardens – which is to say the brass gets harder each time you “work it.” So the effect of necking down a casing which has been properly annealed, is that after you “work” it, it is no longer properly annealed. Finally, necking a larger caliber into a smaller one results in neck walls that are too thick. The ideal neck wall thickness for a case the size of .22 Creedmoor is .0143 to .0148. Necking down results in neck walls thicker than that. But the Peterson .22 Creedmoors all fall within that ideal spec. Peterson worked with Derrick Ratliff of Horizon Firearms on the particulars of the casing. Horizon has been chambering guns in .22 Creedmoor since 2014. Horizon has been a pioneer in helping move the .22 Crd. from an unknown wildcat to the popular caliber it is today.
2149 16999 2 CZK
Produkt č.: 749018842
PETERSON CARTRIDGE 22 CREEDMOOR BRASS 50/BOX
Číslo výrobce: PCC22CRD50 850005375036
2149 CZK 0 2 149,00 Kč *
Upozornit na dostupnost
Vyprodáno. Není znám přesný termín dodání
Vlastnosti: Náboj: 22 Creedmoor Rounds: 50 Množství: 50

Atributy

Náboje: 22 Creedmoor Rounds: 50 Množství: 50 Dodací hmotnost: 0,695kg Výška přepravy: 83mm Šířka přepravy: 83mm Délka přepravy: 140mm

Detail produktů

Made in USA
US exportní klasifikace: 0A505.x



Produkt č.: 749018843
PETERSON CARTRIDGE 22 CREEDMOOR BRASS 500/BOX
Číslo výrobce: PCC22CRD500 850005375029
16999 CZK 16 16 999,00 Kč *
Dodací lhůta je přibližně 14-21 dní.
Více než 10 ks. skladem USA
Vlastnosti: Náboj: 22 Creedmoor Rounds: 500 Množství: 50

Atributy

Náboje: 22 Creedmoor Rounds: 500 Množství: 50 Dodací hmotnost: 5,942kg Výška přepravy: 114mm Šířka přepravy: 267mm Délka přepravy: 267mm

Detail produktů

Made in USA
US exportní klasifikace: 0A505.x


According to Derek Peterson, president of Peterson Cartridge, “We decided to build the tooling to make .22 Creedmoor brass in response to the uptick in long-distance predator and varmint hunting. Plus the round is just straight-up fun to shoot. It is a low-recoil, flat shooting, wind-bucking round; deadly accurate up to 800 yards.” Peterson Cartridge also makes 6.5 and 6mm Creedmoor casings. “But when we designed the tooling for the .22 Creedmoor we set out to make casings with improved features,” Peterson stated. “And we were successful. We increased the head hardness to tolerate higher pressures. And we increased our internal volume slightly to work better with the slow burning powders (like RL 26, or H1000) which people favor for this round.” Prior to this, shooters had to take 6mm or 6.5 Creedmoor casings and neck them down to .22. There are a few problems with necking down. When you take a larger caliber with the correct neck wall thickness and neck it down to a smaller caliber, that excess brass bunches up in the neck. It creates a tension band, what some people call a doughnut of brass in the neck, which has a negative effect on loading, bullet release and accuracy. A trait of cartridge brass is that it work-hardens – which is to say the brass gets harder each time you “work it.” So the effect of necking down a casing which has been properly annealed, is that after you “work” it, it is no longer properly annealed. Finally, necking a larger caliber into a smaller one results in neck walls that are too thick. The ideal neck wall thickness for a case the size of .22 Creedmoor is .0143 to .0148. Necking down results in neck walls thicker than that. But the Peterson .22 Creedmoors all fall within that ideal spec. Peterson worked with Derrick Ratliff of Horizon Firearms on the particulars of the casing. Horizon has been chambering guns in .22 Creedmoor since 2014. Horizon has been a pioneer in helping move the .22 Crd. from an unknown wildcat to the popular caliber it is today.
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