Free: Contests & Raffles.
My 208 Amax bullets have a BC of .648, pretty hard to beat that BC.
Berger has a specifically designed hunting VLD bullet.
I have never shot ballistic tips so I'm not really sure how they compare. The first deer I shot with the Amax's was at 585 yards, and it just clipped the offside shoulder on the way out, and there was very minimal meat damage. My deer this year was shot at about 100 yards, and I shot it in the neck and dropped him in his tracks. Wasn't a huge exit wound either. My elk this year was a neck shot at 250 yards and she dropped in her tracks and didn't have a huge exit wound either.
So are the A Max's a bonded core bullet meant for weight retention, or are they meant to blow up like a ballistic tip. I would imagine if they say they are NOT recommended on game it is due to their inability to stay together or give a delayed expansion.
Quote from: MtnMuley on February 10, 2011, 08:12:41 AMBerger has a specifically designed hunting VLD bullet. Yes but they orginally were designed for Target shooting only.. they found out they were quite effective on game.
Quote from: MDGrand on February 10, 2011, 08:55:37 AMQuote from: MtnMuley on February 10, 2011, 08:12:41 AMBerger has a specifically designed hunting VLD bullet. Yes but they orginally were designed for Target shooting only.. they found out they were quite effective on game. Yes, but the hunting VLD is still a different bullet than the match/target VLD. That's like comparing the A-Max to the V-Max. Just because they look alike, they're totally different.