Being out of the loop for the past week, I only got to scan 1a2b3c's "hunting/sniper rifle" thread and the semi-auto flame war that went on.
This got me to thinking about how to classify my "new" Ruger 10/22.
For the unsure, the 10/22 is a semi-auto magazine-fed rifle, caliber .22lr. Since it uses a detachable magazine and fires "as fast as I can pull the trigger," some might claim it to be an "assault rifle" akin to an AK-47, even though it doesn't have a bayonet lug or a pistol grip.
This was how it looked about a year and a half ago when I bought it, except that I bought it used with a 3x-9x scope:
With the interest in increasing the accuracy of my target shooting, I installed a special match hammer that makes the trigger pressure needed to fire a shot much lighter than the "plain" factory trigger. Just this past week, I have installed a free-floated heavy "bull barrel" and a new composite stock (to accommodate the larger barrel). $130 total for the improvements. A picture similar to what my 10/22 looks like is below (same brand of barrel and stock, different scope):
The VPC says that the addition of a match trigger, optics, and heavy barrel makes any rifle "too accurate" than is needed for "civilian use":
"One shot One Kill"No single feature marks this special class of purpose-designed and purposebuilt
sniper rifles. Rather, the true sniper rifle is an amalgam of specific design
features that make it “a bit better in many ways than its off-the-rack cousins to be
an overall significantly more accurate weapon,” according to Maj. John L. Plaster
(USAR), who is perhaps the preeminent sniper authority writing in the gun press today. . .
Such “purpose-designed” and “purpose-built” sniper rifles are designed and
manufactured for the purpose of killing human beings at more than five times the
range hunters shoot deer.*snip*
We used the second test very sparingly—there are probably many
more such crypto-sniper rifles than we name. When defining
sniper rifles under the second criterion, the entire design of the
rifle was considered. Manufacturers and gunsmiths focus on four major
groups to achieve the uniform performance essential to a sniper
rifle’s precision: the receiver and action, which together
constitute the working mechanism by which the gun is loaded and
fired; the barrel; the stock; and the sights and mount.For example, special attention is given to the “action,” the
moving parts that feed the round into the chamber of the barrel,
cause it to fire, and extract the empty casing after firing. . .
In recent years, however, a number of semiautomatic sniper rifles,
particularly in the heavy and intermediate calibers, have gained favor.*snip*
Sniper rifle trigger mechanisms are designed to operate extraordinarily smoothly.*snip*
(S)niper rifles often have so-called “bull” or “target” barrels.
These barrels are heavier and fatter than the usual sporting rifle
barrel. They may be “free-floated,” so that no part of
the barrel touches the stock beyond the receiver. Distinguishing
sniper rifles from sporting rifles, sniper authority John Plaster
notes that some hunting rifle manufacturers free-float all but the
last two inches of the forearm tip. “This,” he advises, “may result
in acceptable accuracy for hunting, but it is not appropriate for a
sniper rifle.”*end*
In the meanwhile, the VPC also says this about "assault weapons":
"Bullet Hoses"3. Civilian assault weapons are not machine guns. They are
semiautomatic weapons. (Since 1986 federal law has banned the
sale to civilians of new machine guns.) The trigger of a
semiautomatic weapon must be pulled separately for each round fired.
It is a mistake to call civilian assault weapons "automatic weapons"
or "machine guns."
4. However, this is a distinction without a difference in terms of
killing power. Civilian semiautomatic assault weapons incorporate
all of the functional design features that make assault weapons so
deadly. They are arguably more deadly than military versions,
because most experts agree that semiautomatic fire is more accurate—
and thus more lethal—than automatic fire.*end*
So, what do I now own? A "sniper rifle," or a "bullet hose?" I own a
specially modified semi-auto weapon that is probably more accurate
than my abilities can handle.
Enhanced Accuracy + Semi-auto action = "world's most dangerous firearm"?:shrug: