
The thing definitely pays itself very quickly! Also managed to knock the cap off a coke bottle placed out at 190M, after a few spotters here and there. I've taken all kinds of things with it from rats, to bunnies, to hares, to wallabies, even the occasional pest bird.

On the hunting side of things, it's a great lightweight rifle and when put together with a sling, it'll go with you anywhere. Winchester Z's 28grn (Absolute crap, dont even bother, shoots minute of Kim-Jun) SK (Especially red-box match ammo)) 40grnĮley subsonic 40grn (Best choice hunting round) Here's a list of all the 22's i've used in it so far, from best, to crappiest. Not when it first came out of the box, like a 3 inch group at 40M or so. Now onto accuracy, I've done some time with it and honestly, it's a tack driver today. I've set mine to roughly 2.5 pound and cleaned up the sear/trigger relation surfaces up with a fine buffing wheel, and autosol on a small earbud. You're also going to need to free float the barrel if you're sticking with the crummy plastic stock, or alternatively you can order a stock from Hatchers Rifle Stocks:Īlso, the trigger is actually fairly workable too, here's a guide on that. The mysterious Chinese packing oil contaminates these things like the plague and is the reason they get complaints on their tightness. Spend some time over here: (mind you, I didnt have a dremel tool, just sat there on the lounge for hours with sandpaper.)Īlso if you're ordering this new/semi new, you're gonna want to disassembly everything and soak it in a heavy degreaser/petrol. There is a youtube tutorial that goes into the full process of cleaning up a CZ which essentially is the same design as the Norinco.

In fact, the entire length of the raceways, the shape of the bolt and especially the camming surfaces are pretty rough. Now as for the rifle itself, the reason you're getting a seemingly direct copy of a Brno Model 1 so cheaply is because that due to the manufacturing capabilities of Norinco, they're not the greatest in terms of fine machining.

Not a bad price actually, in fact one of the better cheap. The Nikko Stirling 4x32 was of my own purchase as well, the full rifle was $240. Unfortunately they nicked the rear sight off of it so I couldn't ever use it without a scope unless I wanna try my hand at aligning targets via the barrel length. The owner didn't want it anymore and had barely even used it out of the box. When I first got mine, it was second-hand.
