Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: RadSav on December 29, 2014, 06:00:31 PMQuote from: bearpaw on December 29, 2014, 03:32:19 PMIt was a 340 and they are traveling at about 3450 fps. I am still experimenting with that idea I told you about, Barnes bullets performing better in lightweight bullets at high velocity for the caliber. I shot and the elk dropped without taking a step, same as the bear I told you about a year ago. The tough thing is that you rarely recover a Barnes bullet to look it over. Probably any bullet designed for big game would have killed the elk.Do you have an idea of what speed at target was? The ballisticians I have talked with all agree that Barnes is best above 2,600 fps. All agreed the TTSX gave more room for error but still drop rapidly in efficiency once you break the 2,400 mark.I wonder if this is because the copper is more malleable an expands more rapidly creating more shock It would be interesting to know how the temperature of each bullet affects performance
Quote from: bearpaw on December 29, 2014, 03:32:19 PMIt was a 340 and they are traveling at about 3450 fps. I am still experimenting with that idea I told you about, Barnes bullets performing better in lightweight bullets at high velocity for the caliber. I shot and the elk dropped without taking a step, same as the bear I told you about a year ago. The tough thing is that you rarely recover a Barnes bullet to look it over. Probably any bullet designed for big game would have killed the elk.Do you have an idea of what speed at target was? The ballisticians I have talked with all agree that Barnes is best above 2,600 fps. All agreed the TTSX gave more room for error but still drop rapidly in efficiency once you break the 2,400 mark.
It was a 340 and they are traveling at about 3450 fps. I am still experimenting with that idea I told you about, Barnes bullets performing better in lightweight bullets at high velocity for the caliber. I shot and the elk dropped without taking a step, same as the bear I told you about a year ago. The tough thing is that you rarely recover a Barnes bullet to look it over. Probably any bullet designed for big game would have killed the elk.
I would think that the heat created from powder burning, friction of the barrel & friction of the air would be enough to make the copper soft which would speed up the expansion process of the barns, thus more shock...but who knowsDang...is it September yet
It was a 340 and they are traveling at about 3450 fps.
Good read Bob33. And considering American game is the same size as African game, other then shouldered farther back on some African game, will hold true here in the states..
Quote from: mountainman on December 29, 2014, 08:56:18 PMGood read Bob33. And considering American game is the same size as African game, other then shouldered farther back on some African game, will hold true here in the states..However, what was your average shooting distance in Africa? Shortest was 150 on a Kudu, longest was 475 on a blue wildebeest. At 308 velocities, bullets performed flawlessly! Yes, other bullets would have done the same, but in my XCR, the Barnes was a quarter minute round Yes, say" Barnes", and some bust a corpusle, and expound their vendetta for whatever reason, but real world experience don't lie... . To the OP, you can have every faith in your bullet, as long as it shoots accuratley in your gun!
375 Ultra Mag for deer?