Term for small-caliber firearms for hunting small animals
A varmint rifle is a small-caliber precision firearm or high-powered
airgun primarily used for both
varmint hunting (the elimination of outdoor animals which harass properties) and
pest control (the eradication of indoor infestation by destructive species). These tasks include killing three types of
pests or
nuisance animals that
spread diseases or destroy
crops or
livestock:
Animals considered to be nuisance
vermin destructive to man-made properties and vegetation, crops and domestic livestocks, such as
rats,
house sparrows,
gophers, and small predators such as
coyotes and
jackals.[2]
Varmint guns fill a design gap between the more powerful
big game rifles and the less powerful
rimfire firearms.
Big game rifles are more suitable for stalking and taking down individual large-sized animals such as
reindeer,
elk and
buffalo at medium ranges, but not adequate for frequent repeated firing. Rimfire firearms (such as the highly popular
.22 LR caliber) are best used to shoot small vermin such as squirrels and rats at close distances, and are somewhat underpowered for many outdoor rodents (which are often alert enough to spot hunters from a long distance away and flee or hide underground), small predators such as coyotes and larger feral animals such as goats and pigs. The varmint rifles are very suitable for repeated medium/long-range shots from a fixed firing position, thus fulfilling and overlapping the functional demands with both in terms of hunting applications.
Common design elements
While any rifle of sufficient power can be used to dispatch targets of opportunity (the venerable
.30-30 Winchester lever action and the
RugerMini-14 are common truck guns or ranch guns kept handy for this) the deliberate taking of varmints requires special characteristics more common to target rifles than "normal" hunting rifles.
General characteristics
Varmint rifles can typically be distinguished from other light-caliber hunting or
plinking rifles in the use of heavier barrels and (often) omission of open sights. Use of magnifying
optics allows for more accurate fire (often on very small, distant targets). Barrels will generally be free-floated, and other
accurizing techniques will be performed, either by the manufacturer or the owner. The stocks will generally have wider forends, designed for use on stable sandbag rests, and high combs for easy use with optics.
Since part of the definition of a "varmint" is that it is a nuisance, varmints are not stalked, but rather they are hunted from a fixed position. This makes weight of little consideration in a varmint rifle, so heavy barrels are common. Varmints are also not subject to the same bag limits as game animals are, so far more shots may be fired. The heavier barrel is, in general, more accurate than a light barrel, plus the extra mass helps reduce the felt recoil and absorb the heat from more shots before expanding and potentially reducing accuracy. Folding shooting benches and sandbag rests help provide a stable base for the shooter, allowing the maximum accuracy to be extracted from the rifle.
Calibers
Since varmints are generally smaller animals, large, heavy bullets are not needed. A light, fast bullet gives a flat trajectory, making range estimation less vital for accurate shot placement. Velocities for modern varmint rounds are usually in excess of 3,000 ft/s (910 m/s) such as the
.223 Remington and some like the
.220 Swift can exceed 4,000 ft/s (1,200 m/s). This allows long range shots with a short time of flight, and little change in trajectory at different ranges (see
external ballistics). A bullet drop of only a couple of inches (about 5 cm) is enough to cause a miss on smaller varmint animals; so flat trajectories increase hit probability at long ranges. Fast, lightly constructed bullets have additional advantages of rapidly disintegrating upon initial contact. Disintegration minimizes the range of
ricochet particles; and energy release of disintegration kills small animals more quickly than a penetrating wound.[2]
Rifles firing
.22 caliber bullets became popular varmint guns after
World War I. Calibers up to
.264 caliber (6.5 mm), including
.243 Winchester,
6mm Remington and
.25-06 Remington, became popular for ranges over 200 metres (220 yards) as the ballistic advantages of heavier bullets were recognized.[3] Varmint shooting is one of the few areas where calibers smaller than .22 (5.56 mm) are found; the
.17 Remington and various other
.17 caliber (4.5 mm)wildcats have a vocal following, and the new
.204 Ruger is well suited to varminting, and may be the first in a new line of .20 caliber (5mm) rounds.
For shorter ranges (less than about 100 yards (91 meters))
rimfire cartridges such as
.22 Magnum and
.17 Hornady Magnum Rimfire are popular. The
.22 Long Rifle will also do, but the low muzzle velocities result in a
supersonic to
subsonic transition on the way to the target, which can negatively affect accuracy.
Varmint cartridges
.22 Savage Hi-Power was introduced by
Savage Arms in 1912 by necking down the
.25-35 Winchester case to fire a .228-inch-diameter (5.8 mm) bullet. The .22 Marcianti Blue Streak was a
wildcat modification; but the following cartridges fired more popular .224-inch-diameter (5.7 mm) bullets.[4]
.22 Hornet became the first commercially successful varmint cartridge in the
Winchester Model 54 of 1930.[3] It remains a popular cartridge because of the relatively low noise created by its small powder volume.
.22 Lindahl Chuckers were ballistically similar wildcats developed by Leslie Lindahl from the rimmed .219 Zipper and the rimless
.25 Remington.[5]
.218 Bee is a necked-down
.25-20 Winchester introduced in the
Winchester Repeating Arms Model 65 of 1938. This lever-action rifle was not well received by varmint hunters, and the cartridge has remained relatively unpopular.[3]
.219 Zipper is a necked-down .25-35 Winchester introduced in the
Winchester Model 64 of 1937. This lever-action rifle was not well received by varmint hunters, but the cartridge and wildcat modifications (like the
.219 Donaldson Wasp) became popular in other actions.[3]
.220 Swift was introduced in the Winchester Model 54 in 1935 as the first commercial cartridge with bullet velocity exceeding 4,000 feet (1,200 meters) per second.[3] The .220 Arrow is a wildcat modification of the .220 Swift.[6]
.221 Remington Fireball is a shortened version of the .222 Remington introduced in the
Remington XP-100bolt-action handgun (sometimes called a hand rifle) in 1962.[3] The cartridge has attained some popularity in conventional rifles where low noise level is a consideration.[7]
.222 Remington was a new cartridge (resembling a 3/4 scale version of the
.30-06 Springfield) introduced commercially in 1950. It enjoyed great popularity until eclipsed by its military derivative, the .223 Remington.
.222 Remington Magnum was a lengthened version of the .222 Remington introduced in 1958. It was never as popular as the .222 Remington, and has subsequently been replaced by the very similar .223 Remington.
.223 Remington became available in 1964 as the civilian version of the
5.56×45mm NATO, and has become one of the most popular cartridges in use today.[8][9] It is currently used in a wide range of semi-automatic and manual action rifles and even handguns; such as the
Colt AR-15,
Ruger Mini-14,
Remington Model 700, and
Remington XP-100. Popularity of the .223 Remington virtually eliminated production of rifles chambered for the similar .222 Remington and .222 Remington Magnum.[10] Larger cartridges like the .22-250 provide flatter trajectories with less wind drift at ranges over 300 yards (270 m); and
handloading remains an option for shooters using older or custom-built rifles for cartridges with limited commercial availability.[11]
.224 Weatherby Magnum was introduced in 1963 as a replacement for Weatherby's .220 Swift wildcat .220 Weatherby Rocket. Only Weatherby rifles have been commercially chambered for this cartridge.[3]
.225 Winchester was a commercial modification of the .219 Zipper offered in the
Winchester Model 70 from 1964 to 1971. The cartridge was unsuccessful in replacing the ballistically similar .220 Swift in the Winchester product line.[3]
.22/3000 Lovell was a wildcat developed by Hervey Lovell from the old .25-20 single shot case (different from .25-20 Winchester). Popularity of Lovell's cartridges declined when manufacture of .25-20 single-shot cartridges ceased.[12]
.22-4000 Schnerring-Sedgley was a wildcat developed by
Frankford Arsenal Proof House Foreman George Schnerring by necking down a
7mm Mauser.[13]
Bolt-action rifles dominate the class, with a few specialized
AR-15 variants (often referred to as "
modern sporting rifles") and
single-shot rifles making up the rest. Most bolt-action rifles, if accurized, can be successfully used for varmint hunting. While nearly all varmint guns are rifles, there are a few pistols, generally single shot and bolt-action pistols in rifle calibers such as those developed for
metallic silhouette shooting, that have sufficient accuracy, range, and trajectory to allow them to be used for varmint shooting. The
Remington XP-100 bolt-action pistol and its aptly named
.221 Fireball cartridge, introduced in 1963, were developed for varmint hunting; the full name is the "Model XP-100 Varmint Special".
For varmint and pest control in urban areas,
air guns make suitable choices. While the limited power of an air rifle (generally far less than a .22 Long Rifle) limits its usefulness to small rodents at very short range, the limited penetration and low noise allows them to be used in areas where use of firearms is impractical. The popular air gun sport of
field target is based on small game and varmint shooting, with targets often shaped like
rabbits,
squirrels, and other suitable small varmints. The low velocities of air gun pellets makes accurate range estimation paramount, so high magnification telescopic sights are used, with calibrated focus knobs that serve to estimate the range.
See also
Poacher's gun, a type of varmint rifle that can be disassembled for concealment
References
^"Nongame Animals". California Fish and Game Commission. Archived from
the original on 13 August 2010. Retrieved 5 August 2010.
^
abCraige, John Houston, Captain The Practical Book of American Guns (1950) Bramhall House pp.211–222
^
abcdefghiHornady, J.W. Hornady Handbook of Cartridge Reloading (1967) Hornady Manufacturing Company
^Landis, Charles S. Twenty-Two Caliber Varmint Rifles (1947) Telegraph Press
^Landis, Charles S. Twenty-Two Caliber Varmint Rifles (1947) Telegraph Press pp.118–147
^Landis, Charles S. Twenty-Two Caliber Varmint Rifles (1947) Telegraph Press pp.36–43
^Skinner, Stan (September 2005).
"The .221 Remington Fireball". Guns&Ammo. Intermedia Outdoors. Retrieved 16 September 2010. Also, shooters in the fairly populous eastern U.S. discovered that its noise signature was notably less conspicuous than the considerably hotter .220 Swift.