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Old school Ruger red pad, tang safety? Purchased a .257 Roberts from a friend of mine when he retired from driving Aircraft Carriers. Classy rifle!, for factory stuff. The Federal Premium 120gr Partition is hard to beat.
Quote from: Biggerhammer on May 26, 2015, 09:02:22 PMOld school Ruger red pad, tang safety? Purchased a .257 Roberts from a friend of mine when he retired from driving Aircraft Carriers. Classy rifle!, for factory stuff. The Federal Premium 120gr Partition is hard to beat. I own a '72 model year with factory adjustable trigger, great gun. Save your brass and load your own, I too use the partitions.
We run the Ultra Light version of that gun you have. Both great shooters. Most of the factory ammo is disappointing. Heavy bullets almost ruin the benefit of the little cartridge. Small diameter bullets need speed to perform their best. While the Partition works well at nearly all velocities the 120 grain doesn't optimize the cartridge unless shooting elk. Even the 117 Inner-Lok Hornady in Light Magnum (best factory load so far) has given us 50 to 100 yard recoveries on deer when impacts have been reaching 200 yards. Never lost an animal with the 117HIL, but was always lacking in fast kills at medium range.After a lot of research and an inability to find factory ammo I started loading my own. Both the Hornady SST and the 100 grain Partition have been extremely impressive on bear and deer. Giving the accuracy advantage to the 117 SST and the quick kill advantage to the 100 grain Partition. After seeing the results of those two I'd guess if the wife decided to tackle elk with her Bob I'd split the difference and load the 115 Partition for that.I'm loading both Nosler and Remington brass with Norma powders at darn near max velocities. We are getting .5" and .75" groups with the two guns using the Nosler brass, Norma URP and 117 SST. .75" and 1" groups with the Remington Brass, Norma 204 and 100 Partition. If the wife would let me put pillars in her gun I'd expect she would get the same groups my gun gets. Though I guess within the range limitations of the Bob 1/4" difference doesn't really matter all that much.Crazy thing about these little Bob's is they seem to kill bear much faster than they do deer. I assume that is due to resistance giving better expansion at the Bob velocity limits. Penetration has never been a factor and always left us impressed!