
12-24-2009, 09:02 PM
|
 |
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 392
|
|
New .22 cal plinkers
__________________
Tony,
Check out my Photography Website
PhotographicEndeavors.com
NRA Life Member
Kahr PM9
Kahr K40
|

12-25-2009, 08:03 PM
|
 |
KahrTalk 1K Member
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: NE Texas
Posts: 2,380
|
|
Nice guns. Although the skeeters can be ammo sensitive, I have no doubt that nursing 500-600 rounds through them will smooth them out well. One of my friends bought one last year and his is flawless with the CCI mini-mags as well as Rem Golden Bullets (100 pack... NOT the wal-mart bulk pack stuff). I've been kicking around the idea of buying one to compliment my P239 40 cal, and my gun shop buddy still has one of the pink ones in stock ..... my wife really, really, needs her very own Sig  ....
surv
|

12-26-2009, 07:32 AM
|
 |
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 392
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by mr surveyor
Nice guns. Although the skeeters can be ammo sensitive,
|
I have has read the same information concerning these gun being ammo sensitive and find that to be the case with must .22 cal semiauto pistols. So far we have only shot the CCI Mini-mags and only had a couple of FTF issues. I have purchased four of 550 round boxes of the Federal Champion High Velocity 36 gr HP to try in these guns at our next outing. They should be OK I think as the velocity at the muzzle is 1260 FPS verses the CCI Mini-mags at 40 gr and 1235 FPS.
I have hand cycled the slides about 250 to 300 times on each gun and they are now smooth as silk. The trigger leaves a little to be desired but I think it will also get better with use. Its not to bad in SA but very heavy and not very smooth at all in DA. Anyway we like the little guns and will have a great time shooting them. I am one very lucky as my wife is my favorite range partner and the cost of shooting our 9mm and .38 sp can add up fast limiting our range time. These little guns will at least allow us to shoot as much as we wish and we do enjoy the time on the range.
__________________
Tony,
Check out my Photography Website
PhotographicEndeavors.com
NRA Life Member
Kahr PM9
Kahr K40
Last edited by Ol'coot; 12-26-2009 at 04:47 PM.
|

12-26-2009, 03:25 PM
|
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 234
|
|
I'm glad to hear Sig got the Mosquito running so well. When it first came out several years ago I purchased one and it never ran. Constant FTF's. With any and all ammo. Went back to Sig twice and still didn't function. Gun store owner gave me full credit toward another gun (Glock!) and I've not touched a Sig since.
|

12-26-2009, 04:18 PM
|
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 379
|
|
My friend has one of those sigs, and I have a Walther P22, we've both encountered each to be ammo sensitive. We found that Remington goldens work the best for the cheap ammo and CCI Mini mags work excellent in them.
|

12-26-2009, 05:08 PM
|
 |
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 392
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by zena
I'm glad to hear Sig got the Mosquito running so well. When it first came out several years ago I purchased one and it never ran. Constant FTF's. With any and all ammo. Went back to Sig twice and still didn't function. Gun store owner gave me full credit toward another gun (Glock!) and I've not touched a Sig since.
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chief Joseph
My friend has one of those sigs, and I have a Walther P22, we've both encountered each to be ammo sensitive. We found that Remington goldens work the best for the cheap ammo and CCI Mini mags work excellent in them.
|
We did as much research as possible before deciding to go with the Mosquito's and did considering just about every .22 cal in the same price range. We really did not want just a target pistol but something that feels and looks like a regular pistol. It came down to the Mosquito and the Walther P-22 and after holding each the Sig's just felt better in our hands. In my research I found many people singing the praises of both guns and the same for the negatives. I do notice the most of the major issues seemed to be with the earliest models and that there was less issues posted on the new ones, Both guns are said to run best with the Mini-Mags or other high quality ammo and they dislike the cheaper bulk ammo. If there are no more issues that we experienced during our initial test, I will be thrilled and very pleased with this purchase.
__________________
Tony,
Check out my Photography Website
PhotographicEndeavors.com
NRA Life Member
Kahr PM9
Kahr K40
|

12-26-2009, 09:34 PM
|
 |
KahrTalk 1K Member
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: NE Texas
Posts: 2,380
|
|
My friend that bought the Mosquito had me take him to the range to break it in and help him learn the gun. Knowing that they still need a bit of pampering and knowledge of which recoil spring to use for various loads, I tried to talk him into something a bit more forgiving like a Ruger 22/45 or Browning Buckmark, but he was infatuated with the Sig. For a real "gun person", there's absolutely nothing that can't be understood about break-in and proper handling to make the Mosquito work, but a novice can have real problems. Sig obviously knows what ammo "works" in a new pistol, and his was no different. We started his with mini-mags and Rem GB's for the first hundred rounds or so, then I tried some 36 grain Winchester and 36 grain Federal, and had numerous FTE problems. I have a feeling that with a few hundred, or few thousand rounds of good recommended ammo that the Mosquito will handle even the cheap bulk stuff... with maybe the exception of the really cheap bulk boxed golden bullets (about 10% the bullets are seated about 5 degrees out of plumb).
I would be very interested to hear the results of the 36 grainers in a new Mosquito, as it seems that until all the rough edges are knocked down they need the energy from the 40 grainers to properly cycle.
Keep us informed (I followed the Mosquito discussions on the Sig forum for a long time).
surv
|

12-27-2009, 07:32 AM
|
 |
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 392
|
|
Surv,
I will do a follow up post after my next outing
__________________
Tony,
Check out my Photography Website
PhotographicEndeavors.com
NRA Life Member
Kahr PM9
Kahr K40
|

12-27-2009, 02:30 PM
|
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 379
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by mr surveyor
My friend that bought the Mosquito had me take him to the range to break it in and help him learn the gun. Knowing that they still need a bit of pampering and knowledge of which recoil spring to use for various loads, I tried to talk him into something a bit more forgiving like a Ruger 22/45 or Browning Buckmark, but he was infatuated with the Sig. For a real "gun person", there's absolutely nothing that can't be understood about break-in and proper handling to make the Mosquito work, but a novice can have real problems. Sig obviously knows what ammo "works" in a new pistol, and his was no different. We started his with mini-mags and Rem GB's for the first hundred rounds or so, then I tried some 36 grain Winchester and 36 grain Federal, and had numerous FTE problems. I have a feeling that with a few hundred, or few thousand rounds of good recommended ammo that the Mosquito will handle even the cheap bulk stuff... with maybe the exception of the really cheap bulk boxed golden bullets (about 10% the bullets are seated about 5 degrees out of plumb).
I would be very interested to hear the results of the 36 grainers in a new Mosquito, as it seems that until all the rough edges are knocked down they need the energy from the 40 grainers to properly cycle.
Keep us informed (I followed the Mosquito discussions on the Sig forum for a long time).
surv
|
The Federal were completely unusable in my friends sig. The rim shape is the prob we figured out. They were a little better in my P22, but still unusable. The Golden bullets, while having a few duds is the way to go for pure cheap and 98 percent reliability.
|

12-27-2009, 03:22 PM
|
 |
KahrTalk 1K Member
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: NE Texas
Posts: 2,380
|
|
I'm not sure what Remington does with their line of Golden Bullets. They do package 500 (or 550) bulk packs under the label of Golden Bullets (we used to pick them up a china mart), but my range friends and I have found these to be the most aggrivating thing Remington ever sold. As I said above, a high percentage of them have the bullets improperly seated (5 degrees out of plumb), making them jam both rifles and pistols. I generally even have to discard 2-3 per box that won't even force into my .22 cal revolvers. But, on the other hand, Remington also packages their "Golden Bullets" in clear plastic clam shell boxes of 100, and these not only have a differeent appearance, they are near what I would consider the lower end of match grade quality. It's as if Remington packages two different levels of quality sold under the same product name? There's no doubt been a lot of .22 cal firearms sent back to their mother ship, put into the used gun market, or stuffed in the back of the closet because of the failure rate of .22 cal ammunition in general.
surv
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:19 PM.
|
|