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.220 Swift
Type Rifle
Place of origin  USA
Production history
Designer Winchester
Designed 1935
Manufacturer Winchester
Produced 1935
Specifications
Parent case 6mm Lee Navy
Bullet diameter .224 in (5.7 mm)
Neck diameter .260 in (6.6 mm)
Shoulder diameter .402 in (10.2 mm)
Base diameter .445 in (11.3 mm)
Rim diameter .473 in (12.0 mm)
Case length 2.205 in (56.0 mm)
Rifling twist 1-12"
Primer type Large rifle
Ballistic performance
Bullet weight/type Velocity Energy
40 gr (2.6 g) HP 4,213 ft/s (1,284 m/s) 1,577 ft·lbf (2,138 J)
50 gr (3.2 g) SP 3,947 ft/s (1,203 m/s) 1,730 ft·lbf (2,350 J)
55 gr (3.6 g) SP 3,839 ft/s (1,170 m/s) 1,800 ft·lbf (2,400 J)
60 gr (3.9 g) SP 3,647 ft/s (1,112 m/s) 1,772 ft·lbf (2,403 J)
Source: Hodgdon [1]

The .220 Swift is a rifle cartridge developed by Winchester and introduced in 1935. It was the first factory loaded rifle cartridge with a muzzle velocity of over 4,000 ft/s (1,200 m/s)[citation needed] and is still one of the fastest and most accurate factory loaded small arms cartridges, though both the .17 Remington and .204 Ruger come close with their lighter and smaller diameter bullets.

Contents

[edit] History

The .220 Swift uses .224 in diameter bullets, as do most of the .22 caliber centerfire cartridges. The original prototype was based on the .250-3000 Savage case, but final designs used the 6mm Lee Navy case instead. [2]

[edit] Acceptance

The Swift has the dubious privilege of being possibly the most controversial of all the many .224 in calibre cartridges[citation needed], and has inspired equal heights of praise and criticism. Traditionalists have roundly condemned it as an overbore "barrel burner" which can wear out a chromoly barrel in as few as 200-300 rounds[citation needed], especially if long strings of shots are fired from an increasingly hot barrel.[3] Its supporters have maintained that the fault lies with poor-quality barrel steels and the failure of users to remove copper fouling after firing, and point to instances of rifles with fine-quality stainless steel barrels chambered for the Swift, which have maintained sub-MOA accuracy after well in excess of 2,000 shots[citation needed].

Performance is currently matched by the newer .223 WSSM but the Swift remains more popular. Even more popular however is the smaller, and slightly lower velocity .22-250[citation needed].

[edit] Drawbacks

The Swift's high-velocity performance undoubtedly comes at a price, because the high velocities and high internal firing temperatures do accelerate chamber and bore wear. [4] But modern metallurgy and cryogenics have vastly improved barrel life with the .220 Swift and other 4,000 ft/s ( 1200 m/s) cartridges, although they still tend to require rechambering or rebarreling much sooner than lower-velocity cartridges such as the .222 Remington and the .223 Remington.

[edit] Hunting controversy

The Swift remains a controversial deer calibre[citation needed], and its use is prohibited in many US states, and also in England, Wales and Northern Ireland for large deer such as Red, Sika and Fallow, but some states, such as Minnesota, currently allow smaller caliber rounds like the .220 Swift to be used. In the cartridge's early days during the 1930s, expert red deer stalkers such as W.D.M. Bell, the recently retired African elephant hunter, used the .220 Swift on large stags with great success, and extolled the calibre's seemingly magical killing powers, which they attributed to massive hydrostatic shock waves set up in the animal's body by the impact of the very high-velocity bullet. [5]

Critics of the Swift have maintained that the light 50- or 55-grain (3.24 - 3.56g) bullet leaves inadequate margin for error in bullet placement for the average deer shooter's skills, and thus invites wounding, which would have otherwise been avoidable. There is, however, little debate about the Swift's proven effectiveness on small deer species, such as Roe, provided very fast-fragmenting "varmint"-type bullets are not used.

Most factory Swift rifles come with a fairly slow twist-rate such as 1-12" or 1-14", designed to stabilize the lighter bullets popular in varmint hunting. Custom Swifts can have faster twist-rates such as 1-9" allowing them to stabilize heavy bullets, including those with a construction suitable for larger game[citation needed].

P.O. Ackley maintained that the .220 Swift was a fine round for medium-large game and used it extensively for example when culling wild burros in the American West. [6]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hodgdon Online Reloading Data
  2. ^ Cartridges of the World 8th Edition, Book by Frank C. Barnes, DBI Books, 1997, ISBN 0-87349-178-5
  3. ^ Barrel-Burners in Guns&Ammo
  4. ^ The .220 Swift at the Reload Bench
  5. ^ Handbook for Shooters & Reloaders vol I, Book by P.O. Ackley; Plaza Publishing, 1962, ISBN 978-9992948811
  6. ^ Handbook for Shooters & Reloaders vol II, Book by P.O. Ackley; Plaza Publishing, 1966, ASIN B000BGII48

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