Creating a .221 Fireball Fanatic

Sometimes it just feels right to turn down the heat a tad to feed a .22 caliber that’s not touted as a fire-breathing laser beam. The .221 Fireball is a cartridge made for fun.

As shooters reading magazine fodder over the past couple of years we’ve all experienced the tidal wave of fast .224 caliber firearms ready made for use in Modern Sporting Rifles. The .22 Nosler and .224 Valkyrie have been heralded as the competing end-all be-alls for the shooter addicted to speed and high-volume shooting capabilities. But, sometimes, less is more, or to borrow the words of Goldilocks’ friend, Baby Bear, less is “just right.”

Just Right

The cartridge that comes to mind as “just right” … sometimes… is the Remington .221 Fireball. Nope, it’s not all that the name implies when compared to today’s hot shot .224 caliber cartridges, but when it was introduced in 1963 the marketing folks at Big Green couldn’t help themselves. At the time, it WAS the fastest handgun cartridge. It could push a 40-grain bullet down the barrel of a 24-inch rifle at more than 3,200 fps, which wasn’t any slouch for a factory .22 cartridge back in the day.

But Remington didn’t start with a rifle-length barrel for their new cartridge, or more precisely, they didn’t need a rifle cartridge for a pistol-length Buck-Rogers-looking pistol they were working on in the early 1960s. Lead by Remington design engineer Wayne Leek, the powers that be gave him the green light on a project that had been shelved since shortly after WW II. They gave the nod to build a single-shot pistol borrowing design attributes from the Model 40-X, which later lead to the Model 600 series actions.

First XP Pistols

Early Remington XP-100 advertisement.

The first XP pistols developed were chambered for the .222 Remington, but Leek quickly found that less would be better for a pistol that came with a 10 ½-inch barrel. The muzzle flash and noise created by a .222 needed to be tamed, so they shortened the case and found that a 1.400-inch case length was again, just right. Some have acknowledged that the new cartridge’s moniker, .221 Remington Fireball, spoke to the fireball that exited the muzzle when the prototype was fired.

After the War

Remington had to refocus quickly at the close of WW II, owing to the immediate shutdown of military contracts their brain trust came up with several new firearms designs, among which was a single-shot bolt-action pistol. Focusing on the long-gun hunting market seemed to be more prudent at the time, so the futuristic pistol got put on hold for several years. Instead, they produced the famed Model 721/722 series of rifles and the quite popular Model 11-48. A decade later they improved their semi-auto shotgun and launched the 11-58. It’s also interesting to note that Leek is also credited with the design of the Model 1100, arguably the most popular semi-auto shotgun of all time.

Back to the Fireball’s host weapon, the XP-100 (EXperimantal Pistol No. 100) was originally designed with a Zytel stock courtesy of Remington’s then-parent company, DuPont. This pistol’s designer took a leap of faith by incorporating a plastic stock into the design. The weight-forward problem of using a bolt action for a pistol was alleviated by moving the fire control group forward to create a better sense of balance.

It’s also interesting to note that DuPont’s trade name for Zytel was Nylon No. 66, which became synonymous with the famed .22 rifle that used the same stock material used a couple of years later found on the original XP-100.

A Wildcatter’s Dream

The competent reader will likely pick up on the lineage for this extraordinary pistol and its new cartridge. Shooters tend to be natural tinkerers, so the XP-100 morphed into a Silhouette Target Pistol in 1980 to address the then-popular Metallic Silhouette competitions, which also intrigued this writer enough to save up his lawn mowing money to join a local gun club as its youngest member.

(L to R) 6.5 Grendel, .221 Fireball, .223 Remington and .308 Winchester.

Next of Kin

The .221 Remington Fireball cartridge is credited with a number of derivatives. The .20 VarTarg (VT) was created by necking down the Fireball case to .20 caliber to appeal to fans of dual-purpose “Varmint and Target” cartridges. Necking down to .17 caliber in the Mach IV gained enough fans to entice Remington to launch its .17 Remington Fireball back in 2007.

The most notable progeny of the .221 Fireball was J.D. Jones’ .300 Whisper, which has been borrowed for the sister wildcats known as the .300 Fireball and/or .221/.300 Fireball. This writer was initially introduced to the .300 Fireball in 2001, and was overjoyed when Remington’s soon-to-be sister company, Advanced Armament Corporation, started development of a SAAMI standardized .30 caliber cartridge based on the .221 Remington Fireball case in 2009.

About the same time AAC started development of what would become the .300 AAC Blackout (300 BLK), Remington Arms bought AAC. January 17, 2011 SAAMI approved the 300 BLK to build into what is probably the second most popular chambering for the AR15-pattern rifle.

What Rifles Exist?

Echo 3 Armory gunshop owner and gunsmith Rich Modzelewski pegs the fun meter with his CZ 527 in .221 Fireball.

Only a handful of factory rifles have ever been chambered in .221 Fireball, most notably the Remington Model 700 Classic. The other one I know of is CZ’s (Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod) Model 527. Good friend and master gunsmith Rich Modzelewski owns a fine example of the CZ 527 chambered in .221 Fireball, and was kind enough to offer it up for a thorough workout to find loads for this time-honored cartridge.

Despite its smaller size, the .221 Fireball is capable of velocities on par with the .222 Remington owing due to its higher SAAMI pressure. The maximum SAAMI pressure level for the .221 Fireball is 52,000 C.U.P. as compared to 46,000 C.U.P. for the .222 Remington.

The CZ 527 has a 1:12 rifling twist, so bullets from 35 to 55 grains make up the range that this rifle is capable of stabilizing and shooting well.

To get things started, I tried and failed to neck down some 300 BLK brass, since I had plenty of that on hand. Miserable fail. Case shoulders crumpled on a dozen cases tried. I started scrounging through my old brass stash and came up with 30 cases that I had last loaded in 1985 for .222 Remington. I ran these through a Redding .221 Fireball form die, and next trimmed them to 1.400 inches on a RCBS Trim Master. After abbreviating the case, I went back and ran the cases through a Redding full-length resizing die. I also had on hand 38 Nosler .221 Fireball once-fired cases that came with the rifle, and these went through the full-length resizing die, too. Once all of the cases were resized, they went back on the Trim Master to uniform them to a final length of 1.391. Lastly, the cases spent an hour getting cleaned with a Lyman Cyclone rotary tumbler with stainless steel pins, and then an hour drying in a Hornady case dryer. Later resizing after firing was limited to a Redding neck-sizing die, and I didn’t bother with cleaning anything more than primer pockets.

Trigger Time

A Burris AR 5.56 4.5-14x scope seemed like a good fit for this compact rifle. Setting up an Oehler 35P chronograph 10 feet from the muzzle in line with my 100-yard targets allowed me to monitor every shot. My reloading setup allows me to load and fire single rounds and use the lag time in between to allow the rifle to stay cool. All powder charges were thrown from a Hornady Auto Charge.

Since I was working with several different powder and bullet choices, I was pretty confident that I could find a good working load in the shortest amount of time by shooting a single 5-shot group and moving on when it didn’t print sub-MOA. Since I wasn’t interested in finding relatively low velocity loads, I settled on charge weights slightly below maximum suggested in Hornady’s Handbook of Cartridge Reloading or Hodgdon’s web-based loading data.

20.9 grains of CFE BLK driving a 40-grain Hornady V-Max averaged 3,522 fps and topped all others with this 0.461-inch group.

After priming the cases with CCI benchrest small rifle primers, I dug through my powder supply to look for likely candidates. I started out with Alliant Reloader 7, and the rifle told me it didn’t like that choice. I had the same result with IMR 4198, H4198 and Accurate 1680, with groups hovering between 1.3 and 1.8 inches with the nine different bullets. Standard deviation between shots was high, with some powders producing pretty hefty velocity swings for five shots.

Not satisfied, I pulled a can of CFE BLK off the shelf and started my routine of starting with the lightest and working my way through heavier bullets. The first group with CFE BLK and 35-grain Hornady NTXs was still a frustrating 1.5 MOA, but things came together quickly as bullet weights grew. Groups with 40-grain Hornady Vmax bullets shrank to half-MOA or better.

Switching to 50-grain Hornady Vmax, groups began to grow again, but were still slightly more than ¾-MOA. As bullet weights grew so did group sizes. To confirm my findings, I went back a loaded up more of the best loads. Subsequent groups fired confirmed that the first groups were not flukes.

The .221 Fireball loaded with light bullets in this CZ 527 is a joy to shoot and a demon on farm pests less than 300 yards distant. If you’re in agreement that sometimes less is more, give the .221 Fireball a try. I’m sure you will be happy with the outcome.

Selected Loads w/ CZ 527 .221 Remington Fireball

Charge weight measured in grains, velocity in fps with an Oehler 35P chronograph 10 feet from muzzle. Accuracy measured in inches for best five-shot group at 100 yards. Note that this is a sampling of best loads from the 45 different bullet/powder combinations tested.

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