Forget the Sig. I've read enough posts about bad results with that gun to never want one for myself.
On the advice of several other members, I bought a
Ruger 22/45 Hunter with a 4.5" barrel at the Fort Worth gun show. It is an absolute tack driver, and I think I paid about $289 for it, NIB. I've never regretted buying it. If you own a 1911 pistol, the 22/45 will be instantly familiar to you, as it has been designed to replicate the 1911 grip angle, and all the controls are positioned where they would be on a 1911 — thus the model designation "22/
45."
I also bought a second .22 pistol that day, a
Smith & Wesson Model 22A with a 7" barrel. It's kind of an odd looking pistol, but it is
extremely accurate — more accurate than the Ruger. The price on it was somewhere around $218. The one annoying thing about it is that the magazine release button is located on the front strap, facing forward. So if you're not paying attention, you'll unintentionally eject the magazine while shooting.
Both the Ruger and the S&W function very well. The S&W is very easy to take down and clean. The Ruger take down procedure is clunky, and the first time you try to put it back together, you'll swear that you're going to bring it to a gunsmith in a bag of parts and ask
him to do it for you. But if you hold your tongue just so, and try one more time, it will go back together. With practice it gets easier.
At the height of the recent ammo shortages, I was always able to find .22LR, and we were still able to get in a lot of shooting.
The other, and to me even more important, value of a good shooting .22 semi-auto is its use in introducing new shooters to the shooting sports. We have used ours a number of times that way. We'll take someone to the range who has never even handled a pistol before, let alone shot one. We start him/her off on a .22 and get the fundamentals of good shooting down; and then over the course of a couple of hours move them up the caliber chart until, by the end of the day, they are shooting my .44 magnum with aplomb and grinning from ear to ear. I've even fairly recently converted an anti-gunner woman into a "
how much was your wife's Glock, and will you help me to buy one?"
Buying a nice .22 pistol is one of the smartest gun buying decisions you'll ever make.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT