http://www.phoenix-arms.com/Products/HP22A.htmlA month ago my wife and I went to Ikes to give her a chance to shoot my 9mm Nano. After about 15-20 shots she didn't want to shoot the pistol anymore because:
1) it was too heavy
2) it was too hard to hold while aiming
3) it was too hard to cycle the slide
4) the trigger was too hard to pull and too long
4) and it recoiled too much, causing her to flinch when she pulled the trigger
That's when I decided to get the HP22A semi-auto .22LR pistol.
Today we went out to Ikes so she could learn how to shoot it. The results were even better than I had anticipated.
1) she didn't mind the weight
2) it was NOT hard to hold while aiming
3) it was easy for her to cycle the slide
4) the trigger pull was short and easy
5) and it had next to no recoil. She didn't flinch when pulling the trigger on an empty chamber.
6) the sight picture was blury because of the nickel plating. That's going to get fixed quickly.
At 7 yards her first round missed the 8.5X11" paper on which two 3" bulls were placed. The next round hit the right bull dead center. The next 40 or so rounds were scattered around the paper, but as she caught on to the correct combination of sight picture and trigger squeeze they began to focus on the paper and got steadily closer to the two bulls. The last 15 had 8 rounds in the bullseye and the rest within 2" inches of the bull at various locations around the clock.
About half way through our shooting session I loaded 10 rounds in the magazine and gave the HP22A a try, to see if her early problems were hers or the gun. All 10 rounds were in the top 60% of the 3" bullseye. The HP22A is a very accurate little gun. After that we did more work on her grip, sight pattern and squeeze.
Overall, the results were far better than I expected for the first time shooting this mouse.
We were using CCI 40 gr RNL standard velocity (1,070f/s). The ammo worked perfectly for me. My wife had one failure to load the next round, but she quickly recycled the slide on her own. She also removed the magazine, loaded it, and re-inserted it into the pistol herself, and cycled the slide to load the first round. She had no trouble using the safety switch or the mag release button. I left the firing pin safety switch on the fire position. Some reported that it was loose and would fall into the safety position on its own. That switch on our HP22A was difficult to move to the safe position with the thumb alone.
I found that the takedown procedure is much more difficult than that of my Nano. Re-assembly is tricky as well. The manual doesn't describe the process very well and the pictures are not helpful. The problem is that the recoil spring can easily buckle and pop out of the frame, both while taking the weapon apart and putting it back to gether. I've found that the key is not to rely on your finger to hold the spring down but to use the slide frame to hold the spring in the compressed position.
Anyway. All-in-all I am very pleased with the HP22A. Most of the problems I've read that some users are having are related to the fact that they ignored the caution in the manual about using ONLY 40gr standard .22LR ammo with a velocity between 1,050 and 1,180 f/s.