The Taurus/Rossi 62 series is a copy of the old Winchester 62A (which is a simplified, cheaper descendant of the 1890, 1906, and 62).
They stopped production some time around 2010. But, the later versions were almost impossible to find in anything but the hideous nickel-plated finish.
The older Rossis weren't too bad. I own a 62SAC ("Gallery Carbine"). My brothers would probably give up a testicle, if I would take it in trade for that rifle.
It's tons of fun and has never given us a problem. (I may have replaced the extractor, but I don't think so; and even if I did, that rifle has had to have seen well over 100,000 rounds.)
But... After about 1992, quality took a serious nosedive. Getting one that worked, out of the box, was almost impossible; and getting one that worked for a few hundred rounds without parts breakage was almost unheard of.
One of my brothers has a Rossi 62SA ('standard' rifle) that was built around the same time as my 62SAC. Even
it has been nothing but trouble. From the day it was born, it has had feeding problems, has constantly been going to gunsmiths, and has had almost every part in the action and magazine worked on.
Eventually, my father (original owner) gave up on it, after his gunsmith told him to "throw it away"
rolleyes
, and it made its way to me as a "parts gun".
...which is where the Winchester heritage was useful. I gave it one last chance to live, by tracking down Winchester parts to replace the problematic Rossi parts. I fitted Winchester extractor, a Winchester Trigger, a modified Rossi hammer, some Winchester parts on the lifter, and tweaked a couple things.
Today, it's still a bit rough to cycle, but it runs great as a Rossi/Winchester hybrid.
I bring that up, because it's an option for people that don't mind doing a little tweaking. You can pick up problem child Rossis for $50-75, occasionally, and get them running with $25-75 worth of higher quality (Winchester) parts; versus $250+ for a usable Winchester 62A (or more for a 62, 1906, or 1890 - if you can even find one in .22 LR). And, in some cases, you aren't limited to Winchester 62A parts. For a few things, you can even use the 1890, 1906, or 62 parts.