Free: Contests & Raffles.
The Accubond might leave a little to be desired at the extended ranges bit is a devastating bullet. If looking to change it up in the future...215 or 230 Berger A ballistic monster that is definitely tough enough for a big critter. Maximum weight retention for deer, elk, black bears is overrated IMO. It's cool for a picture but it is definitely not the end-all-be-all metric for terminal performance that some people tend to think it is. No offense meant to the Barnes Boys, just my perspective
Quote from: Jonathan_S on March 06, 2020, 07:13:54 AMThe Accubond might leave a little to be desired at the extended ranges bit is a devastating bullet. If looking to change it up in the future...215 or 230 Berger A ballistic monster that is definitely tough enough for a big critter. Maximum weight retention for deer, elk, black bears is overrated IMO. It's cool for a picture but it is definitely not the end-all-be-all metric for terminal performance that some people tend to think it is. No offense meant to the Barnes Boys, just my perspective Everybody I've talked to says the Bergers blow up. If they work for you then cool but I personally wouldn't want to be picking chunks of lead and copper out of the meat.
Jacket thickness. Correct they dont retain their weight which is good because they aren't designed to.
Pretty sure the idea of a hunting bullet is to kill animals. Bergers are one of many that are fantastic at it. Agreed that ELDx are better at weight retention. Matter of fact, the last one I shot a deer with presumably retained most of its weight as it penciled through
Your comments seem to come from a place of inexperience. Touting the eldx as superior to a berger or most any other bullet is a bit silly. I shot 20 animals in 2 seasons with eldx and they are just a high bc cup and core bulket with poor lot to lot consistency. They are prone to full jacket/core separation and I've seen several expansion failures including the one Jon talks about. I've been a part of hundreds and hundreds of harvests and what you are saying about bergers is just "internet" jibberish. The guys that have issues are the ones shooting small for caliber and pushing them way to hard. I've seen well over 100 animals taken with appropriate sized bergers and I've never seen this grenading and massive neat loss you speak of. If you shoot any big bullet into solid parts of an animal you are gonna get meat damage from Barnes, berger, hornady, nosler, or a round ball from a side lock.