As some of you helpful members may know I will hopefully be buying an AR-15 soon(once my fiancee’s lease is up in August) but I have been come across another dilemma. I was talking with my fiancee and we figured that we could afford the rifle but not sure we can afford to put many rounds down range. So she suggested getting an LMT lower and then building it up as a .22 cal plinker. This would be a goal for us so she can have something eventually for herself as well.
I want one chambered in the standard 5.56 round for longer and more powerful shooting(compared to the .22). Also I wanted to become as proficient as possible with the round and the rifle. The price of 5.56 ammo seems to only be going up and its becoming harder to find the ammo in bulk as though it seems. The cost and relative scarcity of the ammunition is also a key factor in my resulting decision of whether to go with the 5.56 or .22.
So after the life story that I just bothered you all with…which would be a better bet?
the .22 would be cheaper which means that I would be able to afford to go to the range a hell of a lot more and stay out longer, however with the 5.56 I would be able to practice more with the rifle set up in such a way that if I ever needed the gun for any real reason other than target shooting I would be better prepared for the situation. I was thinking maybe I could get into hand loading in the future to cut costs of ammo and hopefully help me build a healthy supply of ammunition. But for those of you shooting hand loads is it still too expensive to send many rounds down range? So any suggestions or first hand experience with the matter would be greatly appreciated. I have also searched under hand loads and re-loading but to no avail. So if any of you could help that would be great.
Floyd, shooting .22lr will definitely be cheaper. I would order a conversion kit and a pile of Black Dog mags whether you chose to reload or not.
I honestly don’t know what componants cost right now. I haven’t reloaded for a little while and have a fairly good stockpile of brass, bullets and primers.
You can buy a single stage press, dies and a primer seater for not a lot of $.
Buy a few manuals and some componants and give it a try. Loading on a single stage press will be time consuming and it will take you a lot longer to load them than to shoot them! You may get the urge to move into a progressive press but I would hold off on that until you get your feet wet and get a feel for what you are doing.
You can do a lot of training with the .22. It will be cheaper and less time consuming that shooting reloaded 5.56. However there is no complete substitute for the real thing. Plus, you can really tailor loads to your rifle when you reload.
If you have the $ I’d do both. If not, I’d get the conversion kit and save for the reloading equipment.
Ok thank you for the advice. I think I am just going to go with the 5.56 because I know I’ll want to switch if I got the 22. Screw it if its more expensive to shoot 5.56
Perhaps I missed something, but to me it seems, that if you just wanted to go plinking there are much more economical options than a .22lr AR. It’s less money to just buy a Ruger 10/22, and then put the saved money toward a .556 upper eventually. But that’s not the point now is it.
The whole point of buying the .22 upper for the AR is for affordable training, so you can stay familiar with the AR manual of arms without breaking the bank. But ultimately, there’s no point in that if you don’t have a .556 rifle to “take it to the bank” if/when it becomes necessary to protect you and yours.
Don’t buy the .22 upper in lieu of the .556. Buy the .22 upper and save for the .556. Or, buy the .556 and get a 10/22.
Floyd, Ciener, CMMG and Spikes Tactical all make high quality .22lr conversion kits that replace your 5.56 bolt carrier group and allow you to shoot .22 from your 5.56 upper. You will not get match grade accuracy but it will certainly be accurate enough for CQB training at 30 yards and in.
The swap takes only a few seconds. When you are done shooting .22, remove the kit, run a bore snake through the barrel and chamber and replace your standard bolt group and you are back to shooting full power ammo.
Do a search. There are LOTS of threads covering the subject.
Ciener kits on sale and available from Midway USA.
Ciener has a bad customer service reputation but I’ve never had to deal with them. My conversion kit continues to work well and rebuild and spring kits are available from Black Dog Machine.
Why should little noise and no re-coil be a factor when considering a female shooter? Seems like more a detriment to training a shooter then not. My fiance can accurately fire all of my firearms up too high power rifles and the 12 gauge.
Maybe I didn’t see it but it seems to me that the path would be:
Complete lower (Or part one up- I really don’t think you save money but you get what you want, but since you don’t have one yet, you really don’t know. A complete lower later would be easier to sell later then a hand built one.)
Buy an upper with out a Bolf Carrier Group, there is some money saving there, and buy a Spikes kit. Magpul MBUS sights (a standard front sight would save you some cash) and you are in .22 business.
To the OP: You can bring the cost down by purchasing reprocessed brass (about $120/1000). Depending on how much the Brass God takes, you should get at least six loads out of that, bringing your per-shot brass cost down to two cents. BUT, you will need several hundred dollars’ worth of press, dies, scales, powder dispenser, etc., etc. In the long run it will probably cost you more dollars than buying loaded ammo would have, but you will shoot much more.
One thought: Many people will recommend a Dillon press. Personally I think they’re the best thing out there, but they are expensive. Start with a single-stage press, because (a) they are much less expensive; (b) learning to reload while also learning to use a progressive press is not, IMO, a good idea; and (c) later when you develop both the need and the finances for a progressive press, you will still need a single-stage press. But buy a good one.
Some people will say that it takes too long to reload quantity ammo on a single-stage press. Not really. Once you get your rhythm going, it doesn’t take long to reload 100 rounds, so if you need 500-1,000 rounds, just start the loading process a week or two before you need the ammo and you’ll be fine.
I’ve been thinking about this… In my area I can still get packs of 20 rounds of Remington for 9.99 a box. Making the per bullet cost 50 cents. When I buy in bulk of course the cost goes down.
But considering how valuable my time is, the time to reload and save those few pennies doesn’t seem appealing.
Do not over look the Lee Classic Cast Iron turret press , I received one for Christmas & really like it .
You could take out the auto index shaft and use it as a single stage until you get up to speed .
Often you can custom reload for your rifle and produce ammo more accurate than what you are shooting now .
As far as brass cost , do not forget range brass . :-)
I haven’t reloaded .223 for awhile, but I spend about $200 to load 1000 rounds of 223. This does not include the price of brass, because I pick it up for free. The breakdown is:
$35 for 1000 primers
$90 for 1000 Hornady 55gr SP
$75 for 4lbs of BLC-2 (I buy it 8lbs at a time)
This doesn’t consider the cost of the reloading setup, but that was paid for long ago.
I can get cheap Federal 550 round packs of 22LR at Walmart for $15 or so, when they are in stock, so the LR is far cheaper to shoot. Even if you use better 22LR ammo, you won’t be spending anywhere near as much shooting 22LR as .223.