You can get them to shoot but it takes a ton of tweaking to get them there.
As with anything in the 22lr world, it starts with the bbl. The bbl/receiver will need bedded. Then the bbl will need cut back and a new chamber cut in it.
Then the bolt will need a ton of work. Re-facing, polishing and re-shaping the firing pin are a must.
Then comes the trigger work with polishing, different springs, etc.
After that the quest for a quality ammo that fits the chamber you redid comes into play. Walmart bulkpack & cci standard velocity just don't cut it.
There's no free lunch in the 10-22 world when chasing your tail looking for accuracy. 8/9 years ago I built a pretty good 10-22 as cheap as I could while getting a pretty good shooter. Still had $400+ in it starting with a $100 beater 10-22 I got at a gunshow along with a $35 aftermarket bbl.