DRock
Well-Known Member
110 grain Accubond and RL22 will give you 3500fps accurately and kill medium game with authority. I feel more confident with the 115 barnes for elk though.
I can't tell, are you loading your own or buying factory? I've loaded several different brands of ballistic bullets and found 100 grain TSX Barnes work best for me but I've only used them on Antelope, out to 700
Hunting and cheaper has never been a conclusion I aim for. If I draw one tag a year I'm lucky so my one shot is invaluable to me. It takes me 7 years to draw for elk..., so I hunt out of state. If that bullet cost $1 and load development cost $40, I consider that to be a worthy investment. But to each his own.
Staying with the bullets which have a lower price, I can strongly suggest either the Nosler Partitions, Swift A-Frame or the Scirocco II for failsafe performance on deer or elk. In addition I've had excellent performance from the Berger Hunter VLD. I generally stick to the slightly heavier 115 grain bullets just because I can. These will often run around the 3,400 fps mark as opposed to your 3,500 fps.
Enjoy the process!
View attachment 140373 My wildcat has similar h20 to the 257 Wby but fits in a short action, I'll be messing with the 140 gr Chinchaga bullet here soon, got 500 pcs a while back and have 1200 of the 131 Blackjack Ace bullets, just gotta have my gun finished first
Have a RC MK5 loves the Barnes TTSX and shoots .4 with a 5-shot string. Have yet to have any animal take a step... nary a one! Barnes makes phenomenal bullets that work flawlessly... good luck & good shooting!I recently acquired a 257 weatherby that I plan on using for antelope and mule deer out to 500 yards. I want to start load development soon and am trying to decide which bullet I want to use.
I'm leaning towards 100 grain bullets at around 3500 fps. For those of you who have experience with this cartridge, should I use a premium bullet ( barnes, scirocco II, partition ect.) Or will any of the cheaper bullets work just as well?
I agree, 115 grainHunting and cheaper has never been a conclusion I aim for. If I draw one tag a year I'm lucky so my one shot is invaluable to me. It takes me 7 years to draw for elk..., so I hunt out of state. If that bullet cost $1 and load development cost $40, I consider that to be a worthy investment. But to each his own.
Staying with the bullets which have a lower price, I can strongly suggest either the Nosler Partitions, Swift A-Frame or the Scirocco II for failsafe performance on deer or elk. In addition I've had excellent performance from the Berger Hunter VLD. I generally stick to the slightly heavier 115 grain bullets just because I can. These will often run around the 3,400 fps mark as opposed to your 3,500 fps.
Enjoy the process!
Which Hammer bullet in the 257WBY? Anything over 100 grains recommends a faster twist than standard 1:10. Were you able to stabilize the 103 or heavier bullets? Or do you have a faster twist barrel?I agree with the Hammer bullet choice! I've been shooting 257 WBY for years and different bullets, and I have seen the results from the Hammers and they really are incredible!
Try them