Spoiler:
Advantages of Using a .22LR Conversion Kit:
- It allows you to shoot inexpensive .22 Long Rifle ammunition so that you can shoot longer and more often.
- Turns pistol or rifle into an ideal firearm for first time shooters.
- Makes a great tool for teaching women and young adults how to safely shoot a pistol without the intimidation of larger calibers.
- Less destructive to targets and surrounding structures when used for law enforcement training.
- It is a lot of fun!
Introduction To Advantage Arms Conversion Kits:
Advantage Arms .22LR conversion kits for Glocks, Springfield XD, and 1911 pistols are finally starting to reappear after being backordered for almost two years. I have a kit for a Glock 26/27 size frame and a kit for a Glock 17/22 size frame. They work great. My boys love shooting them, and so do I.
To use these kits you simply remove the slide assembly from your host weapon and replace it with the slide assembly from the conversion kit.
Your conversion kit will come with one 10-round magazine. Extra magazines can be ordered directly from Advantage Arms’s website. There is a 15-round magazine for G-17/22 and G-19/23 kits, but it is not flush-fitting and will extend about half of an inch out of the bottom of G-17/22’s magwell.
Recommendations:
Both the G-17/22 and G-26/27 conversion kits are very reliable with CCI Mini-Mag, Winchester M-22, Remington Golden Bullets, and Gemtech subsonic ammunition.
The G-17/22 kit ran very reliably with a threaded barrel and suppressor attached when using CCI Mini-Mag and Winchester M-22 ammunition. Although it normally likes Remington Golden Bullets, it would not function reliably with this ammunition with the suppressor attached.
Like the G-17/22 kit, the G-26/27 kit runs very reliably with CCI Mini-Mag, Winchester M-22, Remington Golden Bullets, and Gemtech subsonic ammunition, however none of this ammunition would function with a conversion kit with a suppressor attached. Don’t waste your money on a threaded barrel in an attempt to suppress an Advantage Arms .22LR converted “Baby Glock”.
You can purchase spare parts, threaded barrels, and extra magazines at Advantage Arm’s website.
Advantage Arms states in the instructions and on their website that the conversion kits will not work at all with CCI hollow-points, Winchester (except for the new M-22 ammunition), Remington Thunderbolt, PMC, or Federal’s bulk-pack ammo. Avoid these types of ammunition with the conversion kits.
As with any .22LR firearm, test a couple of small boxes of ammunition for reliability before stockpiling, however you should expect great results from the Winchester M-22 and should plan on stockpiling vast quantities of this ammunition. These kits are super fun, and you will burn through it fast.
If you don’t have the patience for a detailed explanation, then you will still be well served by the information above. If you want to know more, keep reading.
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Make Your Own Dedicated .22LR Caliber Glock:
Rather than continually switch the slides back and forth on our Glocks, several of us have been able to find brand new complete Glock frames on Gunbroker.com. We have put the conversion kits on the new Glock frames to create dedicated .22LR caliber Glock pistols.
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Ammunition Testing and Recommendations:
Manufacturer’s Recommendations:
The manufacturer recommends CCI”s “Mini-Mags” (40-grain round nose, not hollow-point) or Remington’s bulk pack “Golden Bullets” (pictured right). The manufacturer notes that Remington Golden Bullets work quite well, however, you will get more light strikes and inconsistent loads than with the CCI Mini-Mag loads. With a clean conversion kit and the Remington ammunition I have fired well over 300 rounds before the first malfunction.
Advantage Arms states in the instructions and on their website that the conversion kits will not work at all with CCI hollow-points, Winchester, Remington Thunderbolt, PMC, or Federal’s bulk-pack ammo.
Remington Golden Bullets — Grade “B”:
Remington Golden Bullets are recommended by Advantage Arms and in my experience they work great with both of my conversion kits when unsuppressed. Add a suppressor to either kit and they experience failure to fire, time after time. If you never plan on using a suppressor, then I’d give the Remington ammo an “A”. If you plan on using a suppressor, then the Remington ammo gets an “F” grade.
Gemtech Subsonic — Grade “A”:
As further discussed above, my Glock 26/27 and Glock 17/22 conversion kits normally love Remington Golden Bullets, except that they perform miserably with a suppressor attached. Both kits work great with Gemtech’s subsonic ammunition (pictured right), either with or without a suppressor attached. Grade “A”.
You can order this ammunition directly from Gemtech’s website or a few limited online vendors. It is usually hard to find in stock. You can add your email to Gemtech’s waiting list and they will notify you when it is in stock. Don’t delay ordering. Usually it is sold out by the end of that same day. Buy in bulk. You will be glad you did.
This ammunition also functions well in my Ruger 10/22 rifles as well as a CMMG .22LR adaptor kit equipped AR-15 rifle.
CCI Standard Velocity — Grade “F-“:
I tested CCI’s standard velocity ammunition (pictured right). It performed miserably. Every spent casing failed to eject. I had to use a cleaning rod to push the stuck case back out of the chamber. Where the higher velocity ammunition CCI Mini-Mag works great, the standard velocity ammunition is “no-go”.
Winchester M-22 — Grade “A-“:
I tested Winchester’s M-22 copper washed 40-grain ammunition (pictured right). Although this ammunition is not mentioned in the conversion kit’s instructions, it ran perfectly. You can definitely tell that it has more power than Remington’s Golden Bullets. Of course it doesn’t have the power that a 9mm has, but when you pulled the trigger you could definitely tell where you money went for this excellent ammunition. It is definatley snappier than the CCI Mini Mags and the Remington Golden Bullets. You should expect roughly the same velocity and ballistics as CCI’s Mini-Mags ammunition (discussed above).
This ammunition is very reliable in the Advantage Arms conversion kit for the large frame G-17/22 pistol, both suppressed and unsuppressed. It also ran great in the Glock 27/27 conversion kit without a suppressor, but like all of the ammunition tested, it wouldn’t function with a suppressor attached (the conversion kit’s fault, as discussed further down).
This is outside of the scope of Advantage Arms conversion kit discussion, but Like Gemtech’s subsonic offering, this ammunition also functions fantastic in my Ruger 10/22 rifles as well as a CMMG .22LR adaptor kit equipped AR-15 rifle. The only reason that I gave the Winchester M-22 an overall grade of “A-” is because when fired from a rifle it is supersonic and produces a loud crack when the bullet exceeds the speed of sound. However when fired from the short barrels of the the Advantage Arms conversion kits it doesn’t achieve supersonic velocity, so it doesn’t produce the supersonic crack that it does from a rifle. If you are going to shoot this ammunition unsuppressed from a Ruger 10/22 or CMMG .22LR conversion kit for AR-15 rifles, then it gets an “A+” for reliability, but it isn’t the best when wanting to shoot quietly with a suppressor. I will plan on making this M-22 my primary ammo for loud rifle shooting, and loud as well as suppressed pistol shooting. I will use Gemtech for quiet rifle shooting applications.
I can not recommend this ammunition enough for unsuppressed Ruger 10/22 rifles, AR-15 rifles with CMMG conversion kits, large frame Glock 17/22 pistols equipped with Advantage Arms kits (with or without a suppressor), and small frame Glock 26/27 pistols equpped with Advantage Arms kits.
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Zeroing and Ballistics:
Ballistics By The Inch states that with CCI’s 40-grain round nose bullets you should expect a velocity of 1014 feet per second when fired from a 4″ barrel.
I used the Ballistic iPad app, and assuming the 1014 feet-per-second velocity and a sight height-above-bore of .625″, I calculated the best distance to zero the pistol for the flattest trajectory is going to be 8 yards. With an 8 yard zero you can, of course expect:
- point-of-aim / point-of-impact at 8 yards,
- a maximum apogee of .6″ above point-of-aim at approximately 26 yards,
- point-of-aim / point-of-impact again at approximately 44 yards,
- at 50 yards your rounds should impact .44″ below point-of-aim,
- and at approximately 52 yards your rounds should impact .6″ below point-of aim.
With this zero you can expect to hit within +/- the height of the sights above the bore (.6″) out past 50 yards.
At 100 yards your rounds will impact approximately 10 inches below point-of-aim. At 100 yards you can expect a measly 71 foot pounds of energy out of the bullet, so it is not realistic to effectively defend yourself or to hunt humanely at that distance, but it is nice to be aware of the expected performance should you ever be forced to.
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Threaded Barrels:
Threaded barrels are available directly from the manufacturer so that you can shoot your conversion kit with a suppressor. The barrels come with an adaptor that steps up the thin threaded barrel (thread pattern unknown) to a 1/2×28 thread pattern that is common to most .22LR suppressors (pictured right). I found that when removing the suppressor from the barrel adaptor the adaptor would unscrew from the barrel rather than the suppressor unscrewing from adaptor. A quick fix is to very gently torque the adaptor to the barrel with a 16mm open end wrench. (Keep an extra 16mm open-ended wrench in your pistol’s carry bag and one in your gun toolbox / cleaning kit. They are available at every pawn shop on the planet.) Torque it just enough that when you attempt to remove the suppressor that the suppressor thread connection disengages the adaptor before the adaptor disengages the barrel. Don’t over-torque it. Also, don’t get the bright idea to use thread-locker to secure the adaptor to the barrel. You will need to remove the adaptor from barrel to disassemble the conversion kit for cleaning.
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Suppressor Use:
Both of my conversion kits function great with Gemtech’s subsonic .22LR ammunition and an Advanced Armament Corporation Element II suppressor.
I have found that it is VERY important to make sure that the slide rails are lubricated when using a suppressor. If the slide rails start running dry the adaptor kit may still keep running fairly reliably, however if you add a suppressor you may start suffering failures to fully seat a fresh round all of the way into the chamber or light firing pin strikes. Make sure that prior to shooting with a suppressor that you let a drop of gun lube run down the channel of the slide rails. Just a drop on each side will do, but will make all of the difference in the world.
Experience With Glock 17/22 Conversion Kit and AAC Element II:
It is very quiet. It is interesting to note that with an Advanced Armament Corporation’s Element II suppressor attached to a full-size frame Glock (G17/G22) and Advantage Arms conversion kit, I have had great success with the CCI Mini-Mag, Winchester M22, and Gemtech ammunition discussed above, but have suffered dismal results with the Remington Golden bullets that the kit normally loves when there isn’t a suppressor attached. While the kit normally runs great with the Remington ammunition, but when I have tried to use the suppressor the gun suffers more light strikes than it successfully fires. If you use a suppressor, stick to CCi Mini-Mags, Winchester M22, and Gemtech Subsonic ammunition.
I have found that a significant component of the “bang” comes from the opening action as the pistol cycles when fired. If you hold the back of the slide with your thumb so that the action won’t open and cycle, your suppressed shots will be significantly more quiet. Of course you will have to cycle the slide between each round, but if you want to shoot super quiet, then this is the technique to use. If you practice holding the slide closed, and then executing a failure-to-fire drill between each shot (slap the magazine and then rack the slide), you can put very quiet rounds fairly rapidly on target.
Experience With Glock 26/27 Conversion Kit and AAC Element II Suppressor:
I have had terrible experience using a suppressor with this kit. With the factory threaded barrel and no suppressor it runs great with CCI Mini-Mag, Winchester M22, and Gemtech subsonic ammunition, but it absolutely runs terrible with an attached suppressor. Suppressor = Failure to fire or failure to eject. No suppressor = great reliability. At the current time I can not recommend the G26/27 conversion kit for suppressor use, but if you are planning on not using it with a suppressor, I can’t recommend it enough (with the right ammunition, of course). I will continue experimenting and adjust this paragraph to reflect any new findings. If you have used this kit with any other type of suppressor, please share your experience with us. As of May 2017, Savannah Arsenal’s recommendation is to not waste your time or money attempting to suppress this kit.
About time makes a detailed review about AA using a silencer & both full/compact version I’ve been looking for this type of review for a while before I pull the trigger on 1(AA 17-22 gen3)
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Who? Is that on YouTube, or a website?
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I’m referring to this review. That it was about time someone did this lol. I ended up ordering a g17-22 conversion kit hope to get it by the weekend
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Awesome. I hope that it helped. Please follow up and let us know if you had the same results or not.
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So I got my advantage arms 17-22 conversion kit along with a threaded barrel & an extended 25rf mag for fun lol it runs great not a single jam. I used some Remington golden 36grain hp, cci standard velocity 40grain rn, cci suppressor 45grain hp & freedommunition hush 50grain rn. All cycled, fed & ejected fine with the exception of some duds from the golden bullets about 5 to be exact they had good strikes but just wouldn’t go pew I’ll see if I can post a video when I free some time on YouTube and post it on here. Thanks for this article it made my decision on purchasing the kit a lot easier lol
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Fantastic! Keep ’em clean and they work great! Try Winchester’s new(ish) M-22 ammo. It has functioned very reliably (almost to the point of being boring).
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Have you tested the 19/23 kit with a suppressor yet? If not, can you try that kit and update this blog?
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I have not. I have never owned a G19/23 kit. Sorry. If you get one then please let us know your results.
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