There are many brands. .22 rifles are generally quite finicky, so you will need to experiment with different brands until you find one that your rifle shoots well. Eley 10X and CCI Green Tag are two of my favorites. Federal is my favorite cartrige, DO NOT BUY WINCHESTER ROUNDS
Hunting, target shooting, military, defense, offense, collecting
There are several reasons a person may want to buy a 22 caliber assault rifle. * Inexepensive ammunition * Light recoil (does not kick hard) * Great looking target shooting weapon * Limited ballistic range when compared to higher caliber ammunition
Firearm, ammunition, target, target carrier, spotting scope.
For what? Accuracy, target shooting or beasts of the forest?
A good handgun for big game hunting would be any manufactures gun in caliber .454 Casull. A good target shooting pistol would be anything chambered in .22 caliber.
Several dozen different rifles- it is a very popular caliber for hunting, target shooting, and military use,
If you're trying to shoot through steel, then that'll depend on the thickness and density of the steel, as well as what you're shooting it with. For regular steel targets which you're not trying to shoot through, you typically use regular FMJ ball ammunition, and only fire loads recommended by the manufacturer for the specific target.
A crossbow fires ammunition called bolts or quarrels using a stock and a holding mechanism that when released, fires the bolt.
You will have to buy as many different brands and bullet weights as you can afford and shoot them to find out.
No way to answer without knowing what end result you are looking for. Target shooting, hunting, plinking, etc..?
If you want to determine wich caliber is better for you, start by knowing the purpose of the gun. It can be target shooting, self defence and the such. if you want to determine the caliber because who came across a gun for any reason such as passed down to you trough generation or inheritance, then you have to check the model and make wich should be stamped in the firearm itself and any gunsmith can tell you the caliber if the weapon does not state it wich it will be a rare case. Very old weapons did not have the caliber imprinted. Now a days I can not think of a firearm that does not have the caliber of its ammunition imprinted on it.
There are a number of different places one could go target shooting. Most shooting ranges or gun clubs will have an area for target shooting. As well, some National Parks and Forests offer areas for target shooting.