.223 or .22-250 or 22 creed

TheViking

WKR
Joined
Mar 2, 2019
Messages
1,729
Location
Colorado
Decided I’m going to build/buy a .22 caliber gun. It’ll be used as a trainer gun, varmits (p-dogs, coyotes) and maybe a short range deer gun.

Cost goes to .223, then .22-250 and then creed.

22 creed is very limited right now and $40/box. I don’t shoot a ton, but I don’t want to be blowing money either. Do you see the creed taking off and getting more factory options in the near future?

22-250 is most appealing right now. I always lean towards a little more performance. But a 223 will smoke any varmint out there. There’s a big difference in drop over a few hundred yards between these two.

Oh, I’ll add that I do have an AR-15 already. Don’t shoot it a ton, just not a huge AR guy. But I do already own the 223 cartridge.

Any input? I wouldn’t say money isn’t an option, but it’s lower in my list of priorities.
 
Joined
Nov 14, 2018
Messages
511
Location
Northern Michigan
How far are you needing to shoot? Just look at how far you get with the impact velocity you want for whatever ammo /bullet you want to use. Are you reloading or only buying factory ammo? Just reading what you posted says 223 to me.
 
OP
TheViking

TheViking

WKR
Joined
Mar 2, 2019
Messages
1,729
Location
Colorado
My range goes to 600.

Doubt I’ll ever be shooting critters that far, but I’ll be banging steel at that distance.

Factory ammo.
 

jonpall

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 5, 2019
Messages
168
Seems like for a trainer and short range deer gun 223 is the way to go. Cheapest and easiest to shoot and plenty capable.
 

jcaud

FNG
Joined
Apr 29, 2022
Messages
75
I grew up in a 22-250 family, it was the first center fire I ever shot, and was all I shot until I started deer hunting.

In college I bought a 22-250 and it was probably the best shooting gun I’ve ever owned. I took it yote hunting and had no problems out to 350 yds (about as far as you can see here) and had it on steel to 500 yds (about as far as I could see there). When it came time to look at needing a new barrel, I’d been reading the 223 thread here.

I needed up selling that gun and buying a Tikka 223 (sadly not going to be a 22-250 guy anymore). Let me tell you, I’m not sure it’s possible to have more fun that you can with that little gun. It shoots well, is cheap, and does pretty well anything a 22-250 can do, maybe even more since you can typically shoot heavier bullets.

Not saying I’ll never own a 22-250 again, but the 223 is just so much fun for varmints and plinking. I’ll be taking mine deer hunting as well next year. You wouldn’t regret it!
 
Joined
Jan 27, 2020
Messages
52
I am biased towards 22-250 as well, been using one since I was a teen. Furthest I’ve used it on deer is 425 yards, usually using 50gr nosler ballistic tips.
 

MHWASH

WKR
Joined
Aug 21, 2016
Messages
852
Location
S.E.WA
I Have .223 & 22-250 AI, that used to be a standard 22-250. If you’re wanting a training rifle go 223. Even the recoil a 22-250 will be irritating after a while. With some dialing the 223 will reach out as far as you want to bang steel. Just make sure you get a properly twisted barrel.
 
Joined
Dec 30, 2014
Messages
9,923
223.

The cheap ammo, zero recoil, low muzzle blast, and zero Fs given about length of strings or firing rate (in relation to barrel life) when you do have time at the range is real hard to replace.
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
Joined
Oct 22, 2019
Messages
6,192
Location
Outside
.223 for training and big game hunting inside 500ish yards.

22 Creedmoor for long range (800 plus yards on big game, 1,200 plus yards for target shooting).
 

JRS3

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Sep 24, 2022
Messages
179
I have used all.

.223 makes the most sense, period. Works fine on deer and hogs. Lots of bullet choices. Ammo is the least expensive of the three and available.

I grew up shooting everything with a .22-250 and it has a special place in my heart. I used it as a licensed hog trapper during college
And it performed admirably. It’s still highly effective. I would recommend a fast twist barrel but it does put deer and hogs down better than a .223…..However….

I got a .22 CM this past year and it’s fantastic. It really does beat the .22-250 unfortunately, as much as I hate to admit. Doing it all over, I would take the .22 CM over the ‘250 but it wasn’t a thing when I started. Fast forward to today, I would take it over the 22-250.

It all depends on how much you plan to shoot. Plinking, high volume shooting, cost consideration, ammo selection, all point to the .223 and it performs just fine.

Selective range work but more specific hunting, then the .22 CM gets the nod. I really like my Vandal X.
 
Top