...Again, I want it to shoot 22 longs. First off I have well over 20,000 shells in my gun safe. Bought them on sale once. For that matter I have tons of ammo for all the other stuff I own also but not nearly that much, maybe 300 to 500 shells for each of them. The other reason for longs is they are cheap and easily found in a wide variety of loads.
Chris
Do you really mean .22 longs, or do you mean .22 long rifle?
There is a difference, both are made and sold.
The reason I ask is that I once mistakenly bought .22 longs for a Smith & Wesson model 41 I owned at the time. The .22 long is lower power than .22 long rifle, and would not reliably actuate the autoloader. This was extremely frustrating and could turn an afternoon of plinking into an afternoon of fiddling with the pistol.
If the ammo you have is .22 long, I would highly recommend a revolver over an autoloader.
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I sold the model 41 and replaced with Browning Buckmark, a serious downgrade by the way. I can not recommend this gun for kids. Maybe it was my sample, but my Buckmark would sometimes misfire, and the stock slide grips were not large enough to positively draw back the slide to eject the misfired cartridge. I do not have small hands or a weak grip. The pistol is in an unsafe condition after such a misfire and it usually resulted in a wrestling match with the pistol where it was often quite challenging to keep the muzzle pointed downrange.
I returned the gun to Browning and they replaced the slide with one which had massive gripping lugs on both sides of the slide, which fixed the problem of racking the slide, and they must have done some internal work on the piece because it has not misfired since,. But I can not recommend the gun, especially when there are kids who will shoot it.
Another minus for the Buckmark is that disassembly for a thorough cleaning (maybe a once per year activity) requires removal of two allen screws fitted with very special lock washers, which can not be replaced with anything but those same very special washers. Lose one and you are out of business until you get another either from Browning or a gunsmith. The same disassembly removes the rear sight, a feature I have always disliked, since anything other than the most careful re-assembly means sighting in again.
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For kids, a revolver is almost always a better choice anyway. An autoloader is always ready to fire, whether the shooter is or not.