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Do I need one? Will it outshoot an Anschutz sporter? Are the magazines troublesome or is this an internet rumor? Are the magazines custom or from a mass producer (Savage, Marlin,etc...). Douglas barrel?

Thinking I might be missing out without one of these. Almost ordered with recently ordered centerfire.

Thanks!
Buy his single shot....I have two repeaters and the magazines ARE troublesome. He gets them from an outside provider and he has admitted to me that he has had feeding issues with them...I have ten magazines and all but a couple are unreliable...

Both of my rifles are accurate enough but will not outshoot my Anschutz 54 or Cooper sporters...

They do have Douglas barrels and, at their price point, are a great rifle...
I have 2 magazines that came with my .22. Both function perfectly...............

LC
Mine shoots very well with many different types of ammo. It does not feed great unless the rifle is spotless in the action area though.

I think there are better .22's out there for sure, but I will probably never sell mine.
I've only 'played' with one that a pard had. As others have stated, the one I played with fed like crap. I can't imagine dropping the coin on one.
mine is a 17mach 2 it feeds fine.........
the magazines are hand made by someone other than Melvin
mine has a douglas #1
I have a cooper and it will shoot with it but i will admit it is hard to cut holes with that tiny 17 bullet sometimes
i dont think mine will ever be for sale
Mine feeds ok if you go slow. Both mags work.

Since my aiming point kept changing, I'm thinking it will shoot a little better. On 9x of a 3-9, not sure if more xxxx's would make any difference.

Never shot an Anschutz, so don't know if I could do any better. Nice to have a .22LR that pretty much duplicates your CF in feel and handling.

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For looks a Cooper beats it every which way and probably shoots just as well.



Addition: If I had it to do over would go with the single shot since I rarely use the mags anyway.
Those are impressive 20 shot groups. My 2 Anschutz 54 sporters might do that. I would probably pull one or two so might never know. I asked Melvin about the mags and he said that they worked great unless the were dropped. He was a tiny bit defensive about the issue. I understand why he might have been but I simply wondered if the mag system had been updated. Based on what am reading here, I might wait on this purchase. Will keep free some capital to possibly buy another Nula centerfire.
Well....these aren't good things to hear. I really don't want a single shot. You'd think someone as detailed oriented as Mr. Forbes would get this straightened out.
I'd sure like one but that magazine has me spooked also.

Not that a charging gray squirrel is much of a threat but thats a hassle at the bench I don't relish.
Mine feeds 100% with four rounds in the mag. With five the first round sometimes hangs up. So I load four.

In fact, with four down it feeds slicker and smoother than every 223 AI I've been around.
Originally Posted by prairie_goat
Mine feeds 100% with four rounds in the mag. With five the first round sometimes hangs up. So I load four.

In fact, with four down it feeds slicker and smoother than every 223 AI I've been around.


I could live with four.
Originally Posted by Lawdwaz
Originally Posted by prairie_goat
Mine feeds 100% with four rounds in the mag. With five the first round sometimes hangs up. So I load four.

In fact, with four down it feeds slicker and smoother than every 223 AI I've been around.


I could live with four.


It's four times as good as a single shot... Yeah, I'd be more than ok with 4 rounds...in the dangerous squirrel situation you could go 4 down and 1 in the pipe.
About one out of every 4 rounds does not eject from almost every Anschutz repeater, including both of mine. You learn to live with the quirks of an owned rifle. I guess the Nula rimfire is entitled to have a quirk or two. I am surprised that this issue has not been fully resolved. I honestly could live with a single shot in every firearm except a shotgun. Resale value of a single shot sporter 22 would probably be less than that of a repeater.
I can get 10 out 10 to feed every time in my 10/22's and 77/22. Of course those are just run of the mill factory guns and very expensive semi-customs.
I've not seen a factory 10/22 or 77/22 that will keep up in the accuracy department with my ULA. I've seen a couple 10/22s with match chambers that had failure to extract/eject issues.

Ruger 22s are some of my favorites when it comes to an all around 22. But there's a pile of different rifles out there that will outshoot them in factory garb.

The NULA is by no means "the answer" in 22 rifles. But the NULA appeals to me much more than the wood stocked/blued rifles to which it is often compared.
The story Melvin told me years ago was that when he decided to make a .22 repeater (he'd been making the single-shot for a while already) was that he contracted with a company to make the magazines, since he didn't have the tooling to do sheet-metal and it would have been economically impractical to buy it.

So he contracted with a company, specifically requesting the tooling be made with a hard steel so it would hold up over a long period. Instead, they figured he'd never buy enough magazines to wear out softer steel, which would be much easier to make the tooling with. (He paid them to make the tooling out of harder steel.) The first magazines worked fine, but after around 400 they didn't, since the tooling was wearing--which is when Melvin discovered the reason for the problem.

I don't know what happened after that, whether he contracted with another company or what. The few magazines I've used have worked fine, and of course the rifles shoot great. I first shot a NULA .22 sporter in West Virginia during a visit with Melvin 20-some years ago, and with the right ammo we were lighting kitchen matches at 50 yards with about half the shots, which was a lot of fun!

I have an ULA 22rf, and it shoots 1/2 to 2/3 inch ten shot groups at 50 yds all day long. I'm shooting Winchester sub-sonics and the SGB(Small Game Bullet).

Perfect for prairie dogs and head shots on squirrels and ground hogs.

Steve
My buddy purchased one and it had a feeding issue and he had to send it back to NULA for servicing. My Kimber out grouped it . My opinion, they are over priced and over rated buy a Cooper or Kimber.
The one I have shoots great but feeds fair. The biggest reason I got one was to have a 22 that felt like my ULA hunting rifle. It makes for cheap practice.
Originally Posted by prairie_goat
I've not seen a factory 10/22 or 77/22 that will keep up in the accuracy department with my ULA. I've seen a couple 10/22s with match chambers that had failure to extract/eject issues.

Ruger 22s are some of my favorites when it comes to an all around 22. But there's a pile of different rifles out there that will outshoot them in factory garb.

The NULA is by no means "the answer" in 22 rifles. But the NULA appeals to me much more than the wood stocked/blued rifles to which it is often compared.


When you have 10 minutes between shots it's easier to shoot nice groups...
order one and if aren't satisfied return it with Melvins 30 return policy..........if you aren't happy return it in 30 days with a full refund
Originally Posted by Farming
The one I have shoots great but feeds fair. The biggest reason I got one was to have a 22 that felt like my ULA hunting rifle. It makes for cheap practice.



Something doesn't add up here....:)
Every FTF problem I have had with the Anschutz's and Coopers has been ammo related. I have had some Remington ammo that would not chamber single shot. Never a magazine problem. Match chambers can be problematic in some instances. I now know what ammo to use and what not to use*. Most Anschutz owners know this. The Cooper chamber is a little more forgiving. But the Anschutz's will shoot better with a larger number of Brands and styles of ammo.

*Unless you get a bad lot.
Got a Browning T-Bolt that is a fine little rifle.

Quick follow ups for squirrels with the straight pull bolt, holds 10 rounds because it uses an unobtrusive double helix mag and is more accurate than I am in hunting situations.

Does very well from the bench too and has an adjustable trigger.

Too many good .22 rimfires out there to drop a bunch of extra coin on one that's unreliable.

Just my opinion.
maybe they have corrected the problem by now if they have had this many complaints over the years
I have had an Anschutz fail to feed. I had forgotten this and remembered as was reading the responses. Sometimes the round gets picked up and gets pushed sligtly above the top of the chamber. Ejecting has been the main problem. They spit them up and back into the action. Some bounce off the scope, others just fall back down due to anemic ejection force. I may still try a NULA 22lr one of these days. I feel somewhat bad starting this thread as I have never experienced the feeding problem first hand, just was curious about it. Also wanted to know how they shot,
I have a used Kimber of Oregon 22 (Model 82?). It failed to extract every few shots and the case had to be pried out with my pocket knife.

Yes, I made sure the chamber was clean. The solution discovered by the gunsmith was that the chamber was very tight. He opened it up with an ultra match reamer. No problems since.

Interestingly, as nice as the Kimber is, it does not outshoot my $60 Cooey Model 600 repeater.

BTW, in recent years, I have had many problems with 22s either not going into battery, or not feeding or extracting Remington bulk golden 22 ammo. Rims oversized?

My apologies. I'm not sure how this all relates to a NULA 22.
My Anschutz rifles are not picky about what brand they fail to eject. They drop Eley, Lapua, RWS, wolf/SK and Federal equally. This said, I love the rifles. Like said earlier, sometimes fancy stuff has quirks.
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