Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: JDHasty on March 18, 2016, 09:40:52 AMQuote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:18:25 AMQuote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 09:06:18 AMQuote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:03:35 AMWho wants lead fragments throughout all the meat? Not me. I've never used these bullets but from what I read in this thread, I know I never will. So many good bullets out there, why use one with questionable performance? Don't you shoot Berger's Bobcat? Basically similar performance. I've read all this same stuff about Berger bullets too. Somehow they continue to kill animals. Lots of em! Yes, I've used 140 grain .277 Bergers on my bighorn sheep and two antelope and four deer in Wyoming. I decided to use them for their accuracy and high BC. No problems with lack of penetration or excessive meat loss.I know that Berger recommends some of their "match" or VLD bullets for hunting applications. According to Doubleliung: "The SMK are very effective killers, and cause excessive damage due to fragmenting. A shot to a quarter will pretty well destroy the quarter, a broadside shot to the ribs will have a BIG exit and you may find jacket fragments and bits of lead almost anywhere in the animal." This is almost verbatim what I was told by the Sierra tech I spoke with this morning. So don't shoot em in the shoulder I refuse to believe that people should compensate for poor marksmanship by up sizing calibers or thinking a certain bullet will solve all the world's problems. Shoot em in the ribs and go collect your animal. If you can't put the bullet where you want it, you shouldn't be taking the shot
Quote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:18:25 AMQuote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 09:06:18 AMQuote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:03:35 AMWho wants lead fragments throughout all the meat? Not me. I've never used these bullets but from what I read in this thread, I know I never will. So many good bullets out there, why use one with questionable performance? Don't you shoot Berger's Bobcat? Basically similar performance. I've read all this same stuff about Berger bullets too. Somehow they continue to kill animals. Lots of em! Yes, I've used 140 grain .277 Bergers on my bighorn sheep and two antelope and four deer in Wyoming. I decided to use them for their accuracy and high BC. No problems with lack of penetration or excessive meat loss.I know that Berger recommends some of their "match" or VLD bullets for hunting applications. According to Doubleliung: "The SMK are very effective killers, and cause excessive damage due to fragmenting. A shot to a quarter will pretty well destroy the quarter, a broadside shot to the ribs will have a BIG exit and you may find jacket fragments and bits of lead almost anywhere in the animal." This is almost verbatim what I was told by the Sierra tech I spoke with this morning.
Quote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 09:06:18 AMQuote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:03:35 AMWho wants lead fragments throughout all the meat? Not me. I've never used these bullets but from what I read in this thread, I know I never will. So many good bullets out there, why use one with questionable performance? Don't you shoot Berger's Bobcat? Basically similar performance. I've read all this same stuff about Berger bullets too. Somehow they continue to kill animals. Lots of em! Yes, I've used 140 grain .277 Bergers on my bighorn sheep and two antelope and four deer in Wyoming. I decided to use them for their accuracy and high BC. No problems with lack of penetration or excessive meat loss.
Quote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:03:35 AMWho wants lead fragments throughout all the meat? Not me. I've never used these bullets but from what I read in this thread, I know I never will. So many good bullets out there, why use one with questionable performance? Don't you shoot Berger's Bobcat? Basically similar performance. I've read all this same stuff about Berger bullets too. Somehow they continue to kill animals. Lots of em!
Who wants lead fragments throughout all the meat? Not me. I've never used these bullets but from what I read in this thread, I know I never will. So many good bullets out there, why use one with questionable performance?
Quote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 09:46:45 AMQuote from: JDHasty on March 18, 2016, 09:40:52 AMQuote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:18:25 AMQuote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 09:06:18 AMQuote from: bobcat on March 18, 2016, 09:03:35 AMWho wants lead fragments throughout all the meat? Not me. I've never used these bullets but from what I read in this thread, I know I never will. So many good bullets out there, why use one with questionable performance? Don't you shoot Berger's Bobcat? Basically similar performance. I've read all this same stuff about Berger bullets too. Somehow they continue to kill animals. Lots of em! Yes, I've used 140 grain .277 Bergers on my bighorn sheep and two antelope and four deer in Wyoming. I decided to use them for their accuracy and high BC. No problems with lack of penetration or excessive meat loss.I know that Berger recommends some of their "match" or VLD bullets for hunting applications. According to Doubleliung: "The SMK are very effective killers, and cause excessive damage due to fragmenting. A shot to a quarter will pretty well destroy the quarter, a broadside shot to the ribs will have a BIG exit and you may find jacket fragments and bits of lead almost anywhere in the animal." This is almost verbatim what I was told by the Sierra tech I spoke with this morning. So don't shoot em in the shoulder I refuse to believe that people should compensate for poor marksmanship by up sizing calibers or thinking a certain bullet will solve all the world's problems. Shoot em in the ribs and go collect your animal. If you can't put the bullet where you want it, you shouldn't be taking the shot I just bought myself a sweet new .458 Lott. Can't wait to use it on the high hunt this year.What?
Shoot em in the ribs and go collect your animal.
Quote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 09:46:45 AM Shoot em in the ribs and go collect your animal. pretty simple
I'm not sure I buy the lead fragments all throughout the animal. My fiancé used to work for an environmental testing company and we were curious so after her shooting a deer with a Berger bullet I bagged up some of the bloodshot meat from the wound, a piece of the liver, and another random piece of clean meat from the animal in separate bags and sent to work with her. None of the samples including the one from the wound had any detectable lead levels. Or any other bad stuff for that matter. The meat was actually cleaner than the city water from a heavy metals standpoint. I'll continue to use match target bullets as long as they shoot well and perform as I expect. my experience is with bergers and not match kings but they are close enough to one another that I would expect similar results.
Quote from: BULLBLASTER on March 18, 2016, 09:44:46 AMI'm not sure I buy the lead fragments all throughout the animal. My fiancé used to work for an environmental testing company and we were curious so after her shooting a deer with a Berger bullet I bagged up some of the bloodshot meat from the wound, a piece of the liver, and another random piece of clean meat from the animal in separate bags and sent to work with her. None of the samples including the one from the wound had any detectable lead levels. Or any other bad stuff for that matter. The meat was actually cleaner than the city water from a heavy metals standpoint. I'll continue to use match target bullets as long as they shoot well and perform as I expect. my experience is with bergers and not match kings but they are close enough to one another that I would expect similar results.Direct quote from your post @ 9:47 "The Berger target bullets have a thicker jacket." I am curious what methodology allows a person to extend the likelihood of similar bullet performance to a bullet recognized as having totally dissimilar construction?
Quote from: JDHasty on March 18, 2016, 10:14:31 AMQuote from: BULLBLASTER on March 18, 2016, 09:44:46 AMI'm not sure I buy the lead fragments all throughout the animal. My fiancé used to work for an environmental testing company and we were curious so after her shooting a deer with a Berger bullet I bagged up some of the bloodshot meat from the wound, a piece of the liver, and another random piece of clean meat from the animal in separate bags and sent to work with her. None of the samples including the one from the wound had any detectable lead levels. Or any other bad stuff for that matter. The meat was actually cleaner than the city water from a heavy metals standpoint. I'll continue to use match target bullets as long as they shoot well and perform as I expect. my experience is with bergers and not match kings but they are close enough to one another that I would expect similar results.I am curious what methodology allows a person to extend the likelihood of similar bullet performance to a bullet recognized as having totally dissimilar construction? a thicker jacket than the Berger hunting bullets. I have used both the Berger hunting and target bullets to take game and am please with performance of both. Since my entire post was referring to the Berger bullets, one would assume that the reader would understand and comprehend that I was comparing the Berger target and hunting bullets.
Quote from: BULLBLASTER on March 18, 2016, 09:44:46 AMI'm not sure I buy the lead fragments all throughout the animal. My fiancé used to work for an environmental testing company and we were curious so after her shooting a deer with a Berger bullet I bagged up some of the bloodshot meat from the wound, a piece of the liver, and another random piece of clean meat from the animal in separate bags and sent to work with her. None of the samples including the one from the wound had any detectable lead levels. Or any other bad stuff for that matter. The meat was actually cleaner than the city water from a heavy metals standpoint. I'll continue to use match target bullets as long as they shoot well and perform as I expect. my experience is with bergers and not match kings but they are close enough to one another that I would expect similar results.I am curious what methodology allows a person to extend the likelihood of similar bullet performance to a bullet recognized as having totally dissimilar construction?
He didn't state that the berger target had a thicker jacket than the smk's. He said the target vld had a thicker jacket than the hunting vld If the hunting vld has a thinner jacket, I would assume it would be closer to the SMK than the target vld
Quote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 10:39:14 AMHe didn't state that the berger target had a thicker jacket than the smk's. He said the target vld had a thicker jacket than the hunting vld If the hunting vld has a thinner jacket, I would assume it would be closer to the SMK than the target vld Careful. This is a discussion/debate between 2 engineers. This could get a little more nuts.
Quote from: jackelope on March 18, 2016, 10:44:55 AMQuote from: BLRman on March 18, 2016, 10:39:14 AMHe didn't state that the berger target had a thicker jacket than the smk's. He said the target vld had a thicker jacket than the hunting vld If the hunting vld has a thinner jacket, I would assume it would be closer to the SMK than the target vld Careful. This is a discussion/debate between 2 engineers. This could get a little more nuts.Are you sure about that? My standing as an engineer has already been questioned once in this thread by the other engineer... I'm not sure I count anymore.