Free: Contests & Raffles.
Ttry a 130 grain Barnes.
Quote from: bobcat on March 01, 2011, 09:42:35 PMTtry a 130 grain Barnes. I am shooting these out of my 270 for deer. If i were targeting elk I would consider going with a 150gr but im not sure it would be absolutely necessary
There's really not a whole lot of difference in performance from 130 to 150 grains. The lighter bullet will, of course, start out faster but they also lose their velocity faster. So in the end, the trajectories are virtually the same.
Quote from: bobcat on March 01, 2011, 09:42:35 PMThere's really not a whole lot of difference in performance from 130 to 150 grains. The lighter bullet will, of course, start out faster but they also lose their velocity faster. So in the end, the trajectories are virtually the same.That is true, but only if the ballistic coefficient of of the 150 grain is higher than the ballistic coefficient of a 130 grain bullet.In general, heavier bullets have a higher ballistic coefficient than a lighter bullet of the same type.However, if the ballistic coefficient of the 130 grain bullet is higher, it will start with a velocity advantage and gain a velocity advantage.In the end, it makes little difference. If hunters spent 1/100th of the time they spend talking about bullets on actual shooting practice, they'd be a lot more effective. But what fun is that?
We shoot 130gr Berger VLD pushed by 56gr of Hodgon 4831. Great accuracy and awesome knock down power.