PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • .22 Winchester Rimfire
rdfs:comment
  • The .22 Winchester Rimfire (commonly called the .22 WRF) is an American rimfire rifle cartridge. Introduced in the Winchester M1890 slide rifle, it had a flat-nose slug, and is identical to the .22 Remington Special (which differed only in having a roundnosed slug). It uses a flat-based, inside-lubricated bullet, which differs from the outside-lube slug of the .22 Short, Long, LR, and Extra Long rounds.
owl:sameAs
Length
  • 1.180000
btype
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:vietnam-war/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:vietnamwar/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:world-war-two/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:worldwartwo/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
BW
  • 40
  • 45
balsrc
  • Barnes & Amber 1972
Origin
primer
  • rimfire
En
  • 105
  • 185
  • 210
Name
  • 0.220000
Type
  • Rifle
vel
  • 1050
  • 1440
  • 1450
case length
  • 0.965000
Base
  • 0.245500
neck
  • 0.243500
case type
  • rimmed straight
rim dia
  • 0.300000
rim thick
  • 0.050000
rifling
  • -14.0
Bullet
  • 0.226000
design date
  • 1890
abstract
  • The .22 Winchester Rimfire (commonly called the .22 WRF) is an American rimfire rifle cartridge. Introduced in the Winchester M1890 slide rifle, it had a flat-nose slug, and is identical to the .22 Remington Special (which differed only in having a roundnosed slug). It uses a flat-based, inside-lubricated bullet, which differs from the outside-lube slug of the .22 Short, Long, LR, and Extra Long rounds. When introduced, the .22WRF "was the first notable improvement in the killing power" over the .22LR, and was able to kill cleaner at up to 75 yd (70 m). It is somewhat less accurate than the .22 LR and is most suited to hunting small game such as rabbits or prairie dogs. A variety of Winchester, Remington, and Stevens single-shots and repeater rifles were offered from 1890 onward, but new rifles are not made for this cartridge. .22 WRF ammunition is periodically offered by commercial makers for use in the old guns. It can be fired in any rifle chambered for the more powerful .22 WMR. The shorter WRF cartridge may be limited to single shot use in WMR rifles, since it may not feed from WMR length magazines, depending on design.