Shawn Carlock
Sponsor
The 300 Terminator is Alive!
My dad and I had a conversation that went something like this, "Hey kid you should design a 300 Terminator round."
"Why?"
"Because the 338 Terminator is such a bad ***, I think you should have a Terminator round in any caliber that has long range bullets."
"Ok let's just neck down the 338 Terminator to 300 and start there."
"Well don't waste your time telling me about it, let me know when we have everything to build one."
So started the conception of the 300 Terminator, I drew up reamer prints for chamber and sizing dies and waited and waited and waited. The reamers of course arrived right on time, patients might a virtue but it is not one of mine. With the reamers in hand a special present project from the wife of a good friend of mine came up almost the same day the reamers arrived. It was decided that the first 300 Terminator would be an 8.25 lb (with 2.5-10x42 NXS) light weight hunting rifle. This rifle would sport a 24", Hart, # 4, fluted, 1-9 twist barrel. It didn't take long for dad to get the rifle put together and all finished out. I was excited to test the rifle despite the short barrel length. I had anticipated a longer 30" or so barrel but more on that later. I went to the QuickLoad program and pulled up the case feature I had previously designed as the 300 Terminator. With a H2O volume of 122.4 gr, I ran the powder selection tool and adjusted the pressure to compensate for the +P throating that all Terminator rounds have.
I was pleasantly surprised to velocity predictions with the 215 gr Berger Hunting Hybrid of 3072-3172 fps with my favorite powders despite the barrel length. Knowing the rifles intended use and adding my preference for H1000 powder I chose to work with it first (QL predicts a 100 fps increase using VV N570 powder). I loaded a single shot pressure series working up to 99.0 gr of H1000 and stopped just shy of ejector marks and primer cratering. This was just a good solid pressure to work with and while QL is scary good at charge weight and velocity predictions the 99.0 gr load rang in at 3146 fps at the muzzle. The load charge and pressure were spot on, but we actually got a little more velocity than expected. After determining max working pressure with H1000 and the bullet just touching the lands, I started on accuracy testing. I typically do this by taking the max operating load and changing the seating depth. I started by shooting 3 shot groups seating the bullet deeper in the case by .005" increments. With the larger Berger bullets I seldom have to go further than .025" into the case and this was no exception. At .010" into the case the
215 gr Berger's stacked into a nice .214" group. So the final performance tally is sub ¼ moa, 3147 fps with a 215 gr bullet, ES of11 fps, super stable powder and a rifle field ready at 8.25 lbs. Our new Micro Slab brake did an excellent job taming the recoil. I was testing a 7 WSM with 168 Berger's and no brake right next to it. The 300 Terminator had substantially less recoil than the unbraked 7 WSM despite having a ton more horsepower.
I had envisioned this round as a heavy rifle round and while it clearly is a laser in a shorter barreled rifle it is still my intention to run this in heavier rifle platforms like the LRKM. Below are the specs for 30" barrel velocities with the 230 gr Berger Hybrid Target.
Powder Charge Velocity Load Density
VV N570 104.0 gr 3327 fps 98.9%
RL 33 109.0 gr 3304 fps 100.5%
Retumbo 103.0 gr 3223 fps 102.4%
H1000 99.0 gr 3209 fps 100.2%
The 300 Terminator Next to the 300 Win Mag
It is performance like this that really closes the gap on my beloved 338 rounds. I just like using big bullets on stuff. However, when you look at the numbers and more importantly the actual field performance there is not a ton of difference until the distances get huge. When the distances get huge, like over 2000 yards I have to give the edge to the bigger 338's as the things I have seen them do at big distance defies the computer generated numbers in terms of terminal performance. If you are looking for less recoil, a little more laser like trajectory inside of 1000 yards or something that is just not a 338 the 300 Terminator is here to stay.
My dad and I had a conversation that went something like this, "Hey kid you should design a 300 Terminator round."
"Why?"
"Because the 338 Terminator is such a bad ***, I think you should have a Terminator round in any caliber that has long range bullets."
"Ok let's just neck down the 338 Terminator to 300 and start there."
"Well don't waste your time telling me about it, let me know when we have everything to build one."
So started the conception of the 300 Terminator, I drew up reamer prints for chamber and sizing dies and waited and waited and waited. The reamers of course arrived right on time, patients might a virtue but it is not one of mine. With the reamers in hand a special present project from the wife of a good friend of mine came up almost the same day the reamers arrived. It was decided that the first 300 Terminator would be an 8.25 lb (with 2.5-10x42 NXS) light weight hunting rifle. This rifle would sport a 24", Hart, # 4, fluted, 1-9 twist barrel. It didn't take long for dad to get the rifle put together and all finished out. I was excited to test the rifle despite the short barrel length. I had anticipated a longer 30" or so barrel but more on that later. I went to the QuickLoad program and pulled up the case feature I had previously designed as the 300 Terminator. With a H2O volume of 122.4 gr, I ran the powder selection tool and adjusted the pressure to compensate for the +P throating that all Terminator rounds have.
I was pleasantly surprised to velocity predictions with the 215 gr Berger Hunting Hybrid of 3072-3172 fps with my favorite powders despite the barrel length. Knowing the rifles intended use and adding my preference for H1000 powder I chose to work with it first (QL predicts a 100 fps increase using VV N570 powder). I loaded a single shot pressure series working up to 99.0 gr of H1000 and stopped just shy of ejector marks and primer cratering. This was just a good solid pressure to work with and while QL is scary good at charge weight and velocity predictions the 99.0 gr load rang in at 3146 fps at the muzzle. The load charge and pressure were spot on, but we actually got a little more velocity than expected. After determining max working pressure with H1000 and the bullet just touching the lands, I started on accuracy testing. I typically do this by taking the max operating load and changing the seating depth. I started by shooting 3 shot groups seating the bullet deeper in the case by .005" increments. With the larger Berger bullets I seldom have to go further than .025" into the case and this was no exception. At .010" into the case the
215 gr Berger's stacked into a nice .214" group. So the final performance tally is sub ¼ moa, 3147 fps with a 215 gr bullet, ES of11 fps, super stable powder and a rifle field ready at 8.25 lbs. Our new Micro Slab brake did an excellent job taming the recoil. I was testing a 7 WSM with 168 Berger's and no brake right next to it. The 300 Terminator had substantially less recoil than the unbraked 7 WSM despite having a ton more horsepower.
I had envisioned this round as a heavy rifle round and while it clearly is a laser in a shorter barreled rifle it is still my intention to run this in heavier rifle platforms like the LRKM. Below are the specs for 30" barrel velocities with the 230 gr Berger Hybrid Target.
Powder Charge Velocity Load Density
VV N570 104.0 gr 3327 fps 98.9%
RL 33 109.0 gr 3304 fps 100.5%
Retumbo 103.0 gr 3223 fps 102.4%
H1000 99.0 gr 3209 fps 100.2%
It is performance like this that really closes the gap on my beloved 338 rounds. I just like using big bullets on stuff. However, when you look at the numbers and more importantly the actual field performance there is not a ton of difference until the distances get huge. When the distances get huge, like over 2000 yards I have to give the edge to the bigger 338's as the things I have seen them do at big distance defies the computer generated numbers in terms of terminal performance. If you are looking for less recoil, a little more laser like trajectory inside of 1000 yards or something that is just not a 338 the 300 Terminator is here to stay.