.17 Remington

.17 Remington
Type Hunting (varmint)
Place of origin USA
Production history
Designer Remington
Designed 1971
Manufacturer Remington
Produced 1971
Specifications
Parent case .222 Remington Magnum
Case type Rimless, bottleneck
Bullet diameter .172 in (4.4 mm)
Neck diameter .199 in (5.1 mm)
Shoulder diameter .356 in (9.0 mm)
Base diameter .376 in (9.6 mm)
Rim diameter .378 in (9.6 mm)
Rim thickness .045 in (1.1 mm)
Case length 1.796 in (45.6 mm)
Overall length 2.150 in (54.6 mm)
Rifling twist 1-9
Primer type Small rifle
Maximum CUP 52000 CUP
Ballistic performance
Bullet weight/type Velocity Energy
20 gr (1 g) BT 4,436 ft/s (1,352 m/s) 874 ft·lbf (1,185 J)
25 gr (2 g) HP 4,123 ft/s (1,257 m/s) 944 ft·lbf (1,280 J)
30 gr (2 g) HP 3,839 ft/s (1,170 m/s) 982 ft·lbf (1,331 J)
20 gr (1 g) Hornady V-Max 4,200 ft/s (1,300 m/s) 784 ft·lbf (1,063 J)

Source(s): Hodgdon [1]

Norma [2]

The .17 Remington was introduced in 1971 by Remington Arms Company for their model 700 rifles.

It is based on the .222 Remington Magnum, necked down to .172 in (4.37 mm), with the shoulder moved back.[3][4] It was designed exclusively as a varmint round, though it is suitable for smaller predators. There are those such as P.O. Ackley who used it on much larger game, but such use is not typical.

Extremely high initial velocity (over 4000 ft/s 1200 m/s), flat trajectory and very low recoil are the .17 Remington's primary attributes. It has a maximum effective range of about 440 yards (400 m) on prairie dog-sized animals, but the small bullet's poor ballistic coefficients and sectional densities mean it is highly susceptible to crosswinds at such distances.

The smaller .172 bullet typically has a much lower ballistic coefficient than other typical varmint calibers, such as that of the .223 Remington. Because of this, the .172 bullet loses velocity slightly sooner and is more sensitive to wind; but by no means does this render the cartridge useless. The advantages of this cartridge are low recoil, flat trajectory, and minimal entrance wounds. The tiny entrance wound and usual lack of exit wound on coyote-sized animals make it an ideal round for fur bearing animals which the hunter intends to collect a pelt from. A significant disadvantage is the rapid rate at which such a small-caliber rifle barrel can accumulate gilding metal fouling, which is very detrimental to accuracy and may also eventually result in increasing pressures caused by the fouling's constriction of the bore.[5][6] Many .17 Remington shooters have reported optimum accuracy when the bore is cleaned after every 10 - 20 shots,[5][6][7] though more modern metallurgy used in both barrels and bullets has largely mitigated the fouling issue.

The .17 Remington is also one of the few cartridges in which powder charge weight is often greater than bullet weight. Though this condition has been known to degrade accuracy, the .17 Remington is noted for exceptional accuracy.[6] This reputation for accuracy is due in no small part to the fact that only good quality bolt action and single shot rifles have been so chambered from the factory. Because the cartridge is based on the .223, it can also be used in the AR-15 and Ruger Mini-14 semi-automatic rifles by simply replacing the barrel.

Gallery

See also

Footnotes

  1. Hodgdon Online reloading data
  2. Norma product catalog
  3. Cartridge Dimensions
  4. http://gundata.org/cartridge/1/.17-remington/
  5. 1 2 Bussard, Michael (2010). Ammo Encyclopedia 2nd Ed. Minneapolis MN, USA: Blue Book Publications. p. 840. ISBN 1-936120-01-1.
  6. 1 2 3 Johnson (Ed.), Steve (2007). Hornady Handbook of Cartridge Reloading 7ed. Grand Island Nebraska: Hornady Manufacturing Company. p. 978.
  7. Hodgdon Data Manual No. 26. Shawnee Mission, KS: Hodgdon Publishers. 1993. p. 792.

References

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