Free: Contests & Raffles.
No, I'm not going to shoot a deer with a varmint bullet. I'd rather have a no expansion pass through than blow fragments 5" under the skin.I've done my research and have spoken with folks that take several deer and hogs a year with the 300 BLK. My 1st choice is still a 150g bullet - 2nd choice would be the 125g SST that I posted about earlier. Nothing lighter than that.
Quote from: CP on January 11, 2018, 05:24:23 PMNo, I'm not going to shoot a deer with a varmint bullet. I'd rather have a no expansion pass through than blow fragments 5" under the skin.I've done my research and have spoken with folks that take several deer and hogs a year with the 300 BLK. My 1st choice is still a 150g bullet - 2nd choice would be the 125g SST that I posted about earlier. Nothing lighter than that.You should do some better research then. The two best 300 Blk hunting bullets available are the 110gr Barnes "black tip" and the 125gr Nosler Ballistic Tip. Both penetrate deeply and expand well without fragmenting within the 300 Blk's velocity envelope. I'm still curious why your first choice is a 150gr bullet for this cartridge. What is that choice based on? Don't be so narrow minded as to just think "varmint bullet = bad". So called "varmint bullets" for high velocity rifles are built with the lighter construction needed for normal expansion at the lower velocity the 300 produces. Not all, but most of the 30 cal "varmint bullets" act like traditional hunting bullets at 300 Blk speeds and penetrate deeply. And if you rule out something like the 110gr black tip just because of the weight, you're misunderstanding a lot. Also do not confuse the black tip Barnes bullet with the blue tipped option of the same weight; that one is designed for higher velocity and is a completely different bullet, and not really appropriate for the 300.
I have no debate that sst will work for deer 100 yards and less,anything over 100 yards I don't think you will much expansion.Here's a artical I read awhile ago on the set for 300blk.https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.outdoorhub.com/amp/index.php/breaking-5-different-300-blackout-loads-terminal-ballisticsThis is a 300blk forum maybe your a member already but if not lots of info,and people they say it does work.http://www.300blktalk.com/forum/index.phpThis is from hornadys website which says expansion is best a higher velocity. The Hornady® SST® is designed to deliver tremendous shock on impact while expanding quickly and reliably, particularly at higher velocities.Hope any info helps I'm a member on 300blk talk tons on info there Good luck.
I'm still curious why your first choice is a 150gr bullet for this cartridge. What is that choice based on?
but if the Chuck Hawks KPS method has any credence
Quote from: CP on January 12, 2018, 07:02:04 AMbut if the Chuck Hawks KPS method has any credence It doesn't. It's an arbitrary number made up by someone who doesn't understand what they're calculating. For example, the calculation includes multiplying sectional density by cross sectional area. Do you know what sectional density is and how that's calculated? It already includes cross sectional area. Whoever made up that formula just put some arbitrary factors together to support what they'd seen on game, ignoring bullet expansion probably because they assume it will happen.You're completely ignoring whether or not the bullet will expand at all, and going by someone's arbitrary meaningless calculation instead. Awesome. So you're "not impressed" by the 110gr black tip bullet - have you actually shot anything with them? Even done any penetration testing or anything like that? The bullet you're choosing is likely to pencil through without expanding if the range is much farther than a pistol shot. Ignoring that because you're certain that bullet weight is more important is very likely to result in a wounded animal.
My style of expansion testing.