Fred Ea
Well-Known Member
Everyone,
I love the discussion on the bullets and it is good to get the input from you all, so I guess I will throw my hat in too. I have learned a lot through the last 30 years of hunting experience not so much with target shooting though that the heavier bullets perform much better on game than the lighter bullets. The rule I have learned to go by is the sectional density needs to be .250 or higher to perform well on deer sized game and of course the ballistic coefficient being higher does better with flight. I used to think speed kills and the faster it was the better. I have learned though that higher energy and shot placement is what gets it done, not speed. I agree that the heavier the bullet the better and speeds around 2900 to 3100 is the optimal speed for most.
The bullets I tend to lean towards on my 7stw are the 150-160gr., 6.5 cal. 130-140gr., 30 cal. 165-180gr., these seem to be the optimal weight ranges to me for these calibers. However, calibers like a .243 or the .257 cal., you are limited, the heaviest hunting bullets are right at .250 SD or below and that is were the solid bullets like the Barnes TSX's come into play and make up for it. Now my opinion is from my hunting experience only, not my target experience because I have very little of that and I am sure that a lot of you may not agree with that.
I used to shoot 120gr. Nosler flat base bullets in my 7mmRM because that shot in one ragged hole and I was very confident in them, but was a bad choice for hunting deer because they were too fast and would tear up on impact. Then I went straight to a 162gr. Hornady BTSP and it solved all my problems back then and almost shot just as good. I was all caught up it the sped thing and bullet drop. Mistakes of my youth and ignorance has taught me a lot through the years.
I guess I am rambling now Dano.
FE
I love the discussion on the bullets and it is good to get the input from you all, so I guess I will throw my hat in too. I have learned a lot through the last 30 years of hunting experience not so much with target shooting though that the heavier bullets perform much better on game than the lighter bullets. The rule I have learned to go by is the sectional density needs to be .250 or higher to perform well on deer sized game and of course the ballistic coefficient being higher does better with flight. I used to think speed kills and the faster it was the better. I have learned though that higher energy and shot placement is what gets it done, not speed. I agree that the heavier the bullet the better and speeds around 2900 to 3100 is the optimal speed for most.
The bullets I tend to lean towards on my 7stw are the 150-160gr., 6.5 cal. 130-140gr., 30 cal. 165-180gr., these seem to be the optimal weight ranges to me for these calibers. However, calibers like a .243 or the .257 cal., you are limited, the heaviest hunting bullets are right at .250 SD or below and that is were the solid bullets like the Barnes TSX's come into play and make up for it. Now my opinion is from my hunting experience only, not my target experience because I have very little of that and I am sure that a lot of you may not agree with that.
I used to shoot 120gr. Nosler flat base bullets in my 7mmRM because that shot in one ragged hole and I was very confident in them, but was a bad choice for hunting deer because they were too fast and would tear up on impact. Then I went straight to a 162gr. Hornady BTSP and it solved all my problems back then and almost shot just as good. I was all caught up it the sped thing and bullet drop. Mistakes of my youth and ignorance has taught me a lot through the years.
I guess I am rambling now Dano.
FE