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Author Topic: recovered bullets  (Read 4828 times)

Offline Bob33

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #15 on: November 24, 2010, 10:29:42 AM »
Partitions and solid bullets like Barnes are designed with different objectives in mind.  As stated, Patitions (and Accubonds) are designed to fragment and lose weight inside the animal.  Barnes bullets are designed to retain nearly all their weight.  Which works better is a topic of constant debate.  Under 95% of all circumstances, both designs work well.  I've used both, and the steaks were just as good from one elk as the other.  I prefer Barnes now.  I've butched some of my own elk, and finding lead scrapnel paths in the meat just doesn't sit well with me.  I know that a Barnes will nearly always exit and create a secondary blood trail.  The Noslers don't always.   Once the front of the partition shreds away the base can be pretty small.  If it doesn't hit anything solid it plows on through, but it is more likely to remain inside against the far side skin.  I tend to believe the Noslers may kill just a bit quicker because of the shrapnel, but the Barnes leaves a more reliable trail to follow if the animal doesn't go down right away.
Nature. It's cheaper than therapy.

Offline high country

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #16 on: November 24, 2010, 10:38:25 AM »
good thing about the barnes also is it does the same exact thing from most common velocities.....99% of the time. I have seen where a bull can soak up a berger that hit bone and walk off , that same bullet in the lungs is arguably the fastest drt bullet available due to massive fragmentation.

I am in the same camp as bob on most of the rounds I hunt with. although I really like the SAF's in bigger bore rifles.

Offline h20hunter

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #17 on: November 24, 2010, 10:44:42 AM »
All good points so far. I'll mention it now and get it out of the way. Shot placement is paramount. Use a good bullet and send it where it needs to go and you should be fine. I agree with the positive side of the barnes holding together and leaving less, if any, shrapnel in the meat.

Regarding a crony...I have and use a Crony (brand name) and it works easy as anything. Just don't shoot it.

OK, more pics of bullets please!

Offline high country

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #18 on: November 24, 2010, 10:57:27 AM »
All good points so far. I'll mention it now and get it out of the way. Shot placement is paramount. Use a good bullet and send it where it needs to go and you should be fine. I agree with the positive side of the barnes holding together and leaving less, if any, shrapnel in the meat.

Regarding a crony...I have and use a Crony (brand name) and it works easy as anything. Just don't shoot it.

OK, more pics of bullets please!

they will fix it once for free.....according to my poor shooting friend...lol

Offline demontang

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #19 on: November 24, 2010, 12:32:44 PM »
The thing with barnes x bullet is not all guns like them, but there are more then one brand of cooper bullets out now too. I like the accubounds myself and most have exited and dumped the animal right there. My elk this year was hit in the shoulder and the bullet exited still, so the accubounds are pretty tough I think at least the 225gr .338 is.

Offline Hazmat870

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #20 on: November 24, 2010, 12:48:10 PM »
Here is a Silver State Armory 6.8 SPC 110 grain Sierra Pro Hunter Tactical that I pulled out of my whitetail this year. He was quartering away so I got him about four inches behind the left shoulder. The bullet went through the lungs, heart and right shoulder. I found it against the hide on the right side. One piece of the jacket had broken off but was right next to the main part of the bullet. I have no idea how much weight it retained because I have no way to weight it.

Offline high country

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #21 on: November 24, 2010, 01:41:00 PM »
The thing with barnes x bullet is not all guns like them, but there are more then one brand of cooper bullets out now too. I like the accubounds myself and most have exited and dumped the animal right there. My elk this year was hit in the shoulder and the bullet exited still, so the accubounds are pretty tough I think at least the 225gr .338 is.

I played hell with the old xbt's and xlc's, but I have yet to see a rifle not shoot a tsx reasonably well.

Offline Gutpile

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Re: recovered bullets
« Reply #22 on: November 25, 2010, 08:37:26 AM »
6.5mm 130grn accubond that passed through a Muley doe at 244 and lodged into a cutbank. The 3rd and 4th is a 45 cal 230grn XTP out of my 2010 bear. This was the finishing shot for this bear.

I also have a 30 cal 180 grn partition somewhere that I pulled out of a deer several years ago. I'll have to dig it up.

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