bigtubby
Member
I got two a pre 17 and pre 18 both are great but I would appreciate them more if I lived in a rural area. Don't do any plinking in my neighborhood just houses, cars and asphalt!!
I don't think the market place has decided to call it quits on the 22LR revolver as a Model 617 no dash 4 inch recently sold for $1400 on GB
Well gee, after four months of searching for 22 LR I still haven't found any (except for Eley from England and Aguila from Mexico). Guess I'm just not trying "hard enough"!
Dave
A 22lr revolver is like a hammer, every home should have at least one. Eventually the hoarders will have enough, production will catch up with demand and it will once again be on the shelves. The 22lr isn't going anywhere.
...I'll need an N-frame 22 LR...
I have seen in recent years model 17, 18, 617 prices skyrocket.
I dont see it personally. I have no need for a 22 revolver. I dont see it as a training tool because of the difference between 22 and 38 ammo.
But now it seems with ammo prices so high for 22, there is even less of a reason to own/shoot the 22 guns. I see people trying to sell a brick for over $100, sorry, no thanks, I will pay a couple cents more and shoot 9mm or 38spl.
I have seen in recent years model 17, 18, 617 prices skyrocket.
I dont see it personally. I have no need for a 22 revolver. I dont see it as a training tool because of the difference between 22 and 38 ammo.
But now it seems with ammo prices so high for 22, there is even less of a reason to own/shoot the 22 guns. I see people trying to sell a brick for over $100, sorry, no thanks, I will pay a couple cents more and shoot 9mm or 38spl.
Hey, nice idea for a new Classic - .22 N-Frame patterned off a .38/44 HD - that'd be like a 15-shot cylinder right?
Don't have much to add to the thread other than I sure like .22 K-frames.
I don't buy the line about the manufacturers working 24/7 to turn out products. Bull! Ammo would have to show up eventually. At 100 rounds per customer the one (1) case that came into a Sportsman's Warehouse recently didn't even make a dent in the line of people waiting for the doors to open.
I fear there's going to be a lot of 22s for sale a year or so from now. If you can't feed them they have no appeal.
Dave
A 22lr revolver is like a hammer, every home should have at least one. Eventually the hoarders will have enough, production will catch up with demand and it will once again be on the shelves. The 22lr isn't going anywhere.
I find it sad and somewhat upsetting when those people who fail to keep a stock of necessities on hand try shift the blame to "hoarders" for shortages.
Actually just the opposite is true. It is those who refuse to maintain supplies stocked up for emergencies that causes shortages. The people who buy a box every time they want to go shooting are the ones lined up and keeping the shelves empty, along with all the new shooters. Those of us who stock up when times are plentiful are not the ones out buying during the shortage.
This is true of food as well any expendable and useable commodity that is consumed on a regular basis. Those who maintain a 6 month or longer supply of food, water, ammo and other necessities, do not go buying when the panic hits. It is the person who failed to prepare in advance, not the so-called hoarder, who gets caught up in the panic buying.
Rather than accept their responsibility for being a major part of the shortage problem they like to blame the very people who helped to reduce the demand during panic times by calling them hoarders.
To the man who wanders through life expecting the store shelves to always be full anytime he wants something, anyone buying more than he does is labeled a hoarder.
If a few more of these people would maintain even a minimal stock of most necessities, these panic spikes in supply and demand could be mitigated to a large extent. But no. It is easier for most to just blindly wander along and then cast blame on someone else.
Are we now to call those with more than a few guns hoarders of guns, those with savings hoarders of money, those with several cars hoarders of automobiles? For that is where the word hording eventually leads. It lays the ground work for eventual confiscation of other peoples supplies in emergencies and that is why this word is being introduced into everyday usage by newspapers and other mass media. It is a way to demonize those who prepare for disasters and bad times.
So it bothers me to hear that disgusting word being parroted and so badly misused here on this site in this situation.
It might have some application to those who try and stock up during the panic shortages, but there are not so many of those and they are a very small part of the cause of the current shortages. In reality they are just panic buyers who realize too late what being unprepared leads to. They are certainly going to pay a serious premium for their actions and be left holding a lot of over priced ammo when the prices do come back down.
The wording "Hoarder" is an emotionally charged demonizing word that should not be used lightly or without explaining exactly what is meant by the word. It is no different than any other stereotyping word, such as the worst of the racial epitaphs, or other racial comments that are intended to inflame without support and without thought.