• If you are being asked to change your password, and unsure how to do it, follow these instructions. Click here

FYI, check your factory ammo

There is very few factory ammo loadings that match the numbers, some are low by 200fps+ and others are faster by 100fps.
Who hunts without verifying drop first?
Your thread sounds peculiar to me.
Would you shoot unverified reloads and expect the manual to be correct?

Cheers.
Tons of people don't check drops, probably over 90% of hunters. The users of this forum tend to skew heavily into that 10% that does, but you shouldn't forget about the crowd that just shoots a couple groups at 100 yards in September and calls it good.
 
So hopefully many/most of you have tested your chosen factory ammo extensively and know exactly what you have. I personally never or very rarely shoot factory ammo, but did so yesterday for barrel break-in on a new rifle. Didn't want to waste my good components cleaning a barrel up, so I bought some ammo at an Academy Sports locally to do the break-in with. I set up my radar on the bench and started shooting. This was an eye-opening experience. These were Remington's Tipped Core-Lokts for the 243 Winchester. If I had bought these to hunt out to 500 yards or beyond, I would have been very angry. Check out the discrepancy between the reported velocity printed on the box and that measured by the raday. That's a LARGE discrepancy!!
Lawyer loaded the fac ammo
 
Contact Remington directly and express your concern. Make sure you provide your findings along with your rifle set-up (e.g., barrel length) and Chrono set-up. I would be interested in their explanation.
i purchase Rem factory 95 gr tipped cor look because its new shot great, cust serv @ rem firearm worse than ever 700 alpha xxxx over priced I got one @ Christmas worst rem I have ever owned I returned it in 1st of jan they sent it back in sept it's operable but a long ways from 2000$ rifle
 
Tons of people don't check drops, probably over 90% of hunters. The users of this forum tend to skew heavily into that 10% that does, but you shouldn't forget about the crowd that just shoots a couple groups at 100 yards in September and calls it good.
As long as they're not shooting distance, they're fine, but if you shoot at 100 thinking you're going to hit at 500 and beyond it's not logical. An acquaintance of mine who has since past was shooting long range in Colorado for elk beginning in the fifties. They used their scopes to judge distance and had practiced here in Oklahoma shooting rocks out to 700 yards with factory rifles. They were quite proficient. When I first heard about these guys, I said they were liars, no one could shoot 700 yards at an animal, but after spending time with some of the guys that hunted with them over the years, and especially as equipment improved, and technology advanced, range finders, dial up scopes, I found out targets including animals could be hit reliably at distance given the right circumstances. If you're shooting 100 yards more power to you, but this is a long-range forum.
 
The velocity doesn't surprise me.The velocity spread is concerning.It would be interesting to break down a few and weigh the powder charge.You might find a grain or two difference.By keeping the pressures lower,factory ammo may get by with a larger + or - charge weight.
I wished I would had done that many years ago when I purchased a 25-06.I was shooting Remington ammo.It shot like crap,more of a spray than a group.You could shake some of the cartridges and you could hear the powder inside the case.Then some you couldn't,those were like a compressed load.It even makes me wonder if it was two different powders.That same rifle was a solid 3/4" shooter with handloads.
 
So hopefully many/most of you have tested your chosen factory ammo extensively and know exactly what you have. I personally never or very rarely shoot factory ammo, but did so yesterday for barrel break-in on a new rifle. Didn't want to waste my good components cleaning a barrel up, so I bought some ammo at an Academy Sports locally to do the break-in with. I set up my radar on the bench and started shooting. This was an eye-opening experience. These were Remington's Tipped Core-Lokts for the 243 Winchester. If I had bought these to hunt out to 500 yards or beyond, I would have been very angry. Check out the discrepancy between the reported velocity printed on the box and that measured by the raday. That's a LARGE discrepancy!!
Not surprised. The worst I've ever seen for this was also Remington core lokt in a 243, the 100 grain soft point. Box says 2960. Chrono said 2640. This from a 22 inch barrel.
 
Factory ammo is OK for the guy in a heated tower with a shooting bench overlooking a food plot that is EXACTLY 100 yards across. AND he has a sighted in rifle and knows how to shoot it.

Me, I use my hand loaded ammo. My last factory ammo other than rimfire was 1975.
I guess my answer to that is, "To each their own." I use both factory and hand loaded ammo for both target shooting and hunting, whichever is shooting the best at the time. To those who say you can never duplicate factory ammo, mostly who would want to? In most cases, hand loads will outperform factory 90% of the time.

As for the comment about the guy in the heated tower, as some of us age, continuing to climb up and down the hill and valleys and cross the ridge lines becomes more and more difficult. The choice is to either give up hunting or settle into one of those blinds or tower you mention with some disdain. I am currently 77 years old. I have gone deer hunting every year for the past 55 years and have brought home at least one deer per year, in most years as tags would permit, two or more. I donate the meat beyond what I can personally use to local food banks. For the last 8 years I have limited myself to a permanent ground blind. As for limited shooting distances, mine vary between 50 yards and 300+ yards. I limit my shooting at deer to 200 yards although have taken a nice buck at 240 according to my Vortex range finder. My food plot is just a harvested corn field or bean field, crops change from year to year. My blind, which is actually out in the open is a 6' x 6' Redneck and of course it's heated. I may be old but not stupid.

Below you see my hunting stand, the longest shot that I have and a sample target, this one shot with my Tikka T3x 270. Almost all of my shots result in one shot one deer dead in place. By the way, the shot to the left, that many of you like to call fliers is simply exactly where the cross hairs were when the rifle went off, not an issue with ammo or the rifle. It was all my fault. All in all, still a dead deer
 

Attachments

  • redneck shacks 010.JPG
    redneck shacks 010.JPG
    549.4 KB · Views: 66
  • image3.jpeg
    image3.jpeg
    79.2 KB · Views: 66
  • Tikka 270 1.jpg
    Tikka 270 1.jpg
    166.2 KB · Views: 63
i purchase Rem factory 95 gr tipped cor look because its new shot great, cust serv @ rem firearm worse than ever 700 alpha xxxx over priced I got one @ Christmas worst rem I have ever owned I returned it in 1st of jan they sent it back in sept it's operable but a long ways from 2000$ rifle
I am unsure why you responded to me directly but for $2000, I would do a semi-custom DIY project over a R700''s quality today. I have Remington 1903 and an older R700 both in .30-06 and they are shooters.
 
The velocity doesn't surprise me.The velocity spread is concerning.It would be interesting to break down a few and weigh the powder charge.You might find a grain or two difference.By keeping the pressures lower,factory ammo may get by with a larger + or - charge weight.
I wished I would had done that many years ago when I purchased a 25-06.I was shooting Remington ammo.It shot like crap,more of a spray than a group.You could shake some of the cartridges and you could hear the powder inside the case.Then some you couldn't,those were like a compressed load.It even makes me wonder if it was two different powders.That same rifle was a solid 3/4" shooter with handloads.
One major flaw in this thinking is the fact that no factory ammo plant uses WEIGHT to load their ammo on conveyor machines. It is by volume in CC's where a hopper is filled, a barrel is set and the speed and away goes the shells being charged. If there is a hesitation/stoppage/malfunction then some cases will be under filled and some will be overfilled. Vibration is also a factor.
When a powder change is made, lots aren't necessarily excluded from each other either…

Cheers.
 
I guess my answer to that is, "To each their own." I use both factory and hand loaded ammo for both target shooting and hunting, whichever is shooting the best at the time. To those who say you can never duplicate factory ammo, mostly who would want to? In most cases, hand loads will outperform factory 90% of the time.

As for the comment about the guy in the heated tower, as some of us age, continuing to climb up and down the hill and valleys and cross the ridge lines becomes more and more difficult. The choice is to either give up hunting or settle into one of those blinds or tower you mention with some disdain. I am currently 77 years old. I have gone deer hunting every year for the past 55 years and have brought home at least one deer per year, in most years as tags would permit, two or more. I donate the meat beyond what I can personally use to local food banks. For the last 8 years I have limited myself to a permanent ground blind. As for limited shooting distances, mine vary between 50 yards and 300+ yards. I limit my shooting at deer to 200 yards although have taken a nice buck at 240 according to my Vortex range finder. My food plot is just a harvested corn field or bean field, crops change from year to year. My blind, which is actually out in the open is a 6' x 6' Redneck and of course it's heated. I may be old but not stupid.

Below you see my hunting stand, the longest shot that I have and a sample target, this one shot with my Tikka T3x 270. Almost all of my shots result in one shot one deer dead in place. By the way, the shot to the left, that many of you like to call fliers is simply exactly where the cross hairs were when the rifle went off, not an issue with ammo or the rifle. It was all my fault. All in all, still a dead deer
I'm in my 70's and as I wrote this I'm in a heated blind next to a corn field. I'm not knocking any style of hunting. And by the way my rifle is Ina bog pod.
 
Tons of people don't check drops, probably over 90% of hunters. The users of this forum tend to skew heavily into that 10% that does, but you shouldn't forget about the crowd that just shoots a couple groups at 100 yards in September and calls it good.

Some don't even do that……after all "it was dead-on last year"! 😉 memtb
 
Top