You will have plenty even if you do not achieve your 3000 FPS MV goal. LRH does not happen overnight; practice, practice, practice. I harvested a bull elk at 931Y with my 300 WM 190 Berger VLD, which has an MV of 3043 FPS. Good luck!To be honest, I was hoping to get to 3000+ fps to see if I could get there. I am shooting sub MOA groups at 100 yds with the 180 grain Accubonds, using H1000, and was hoping to find a load where I could get both. I am really enjoying working different aspects of reloading, i.e. different powders, neck tension, distance off lands, etc. Like I said in my original post, I am working up a load for elk, here. I will be zereoing at 200 yds and have a range I can shoot out to 600 yds. Time will tell if I will be comfortable shooting that far. I was thinking if I can get the bullet over 3000 fps, at the muzzle, that will carry plenty of energy out to 400-500 yds for an ethical kill. I may be off base, but that was my thinking.
Yes, you are going down a rabbit hole.Would a better answer be to step down in bullet weight? Either a 165 grain Accubond or a 168 grain Barnes TTSX? How does everyone feel about one of those lighter bullets versus 180 with a little less speed? Am I going down a unnecessary rabbit hole here?
Would a better answer be to step down in bullet weight? Either a 165 grain Accubond or a 168 grain Barnes TTSX? How does everyone feel about one of those lighter bullets versus 180 with a little less speed? Am I going down an unnecessary rabbit hole here?
Would a better answer be to step down in bullet weight? Either a 165 grain Accubond or a 168 grain Barnes TTSX? How does everyone feel about one of those lighter bullets versus 180 with a little less speed? Am I going down a unnecessary rabbit hole here?
I was going to suggest the same thing. I'm not a reloader, so I can't help with any advice in that space. However, I shoot 168 grain ttsx's at 3243fps (which is a bit higher than projected) sold by Choice Ammunition in Montana (see link below) for elk. The performance from both an accuracy and terminal performance perspective has been exceptional! See my profile pic for evidence…Would a better answer be to step down in bullet weight? Either a 165 grain Accubond or a 168 grain Barnes TTSX? How does everyone feel about one of those lighter bullets versus 180 with a little less speed? Am I going down a unnecessary rabbit hole here?
Hornady=interbond, nosler= accubond.FEENIX, the Accubonds got harder to source simply because of Nosler. Competing brands ... thought you might like the pix...
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I respectfully disagree, whether you believe it or not, care for it or not, the energy will always be there - you cannot defy the Laws of Physics. Because it is always present, yes, you can forget it or disregard it - it is always working for you. "I" have an "unwritten rules" of minimum velocity and KE at POI on games I hunt.IMO, you are very off base. Energy is probably (IMHO and many others) the most overrated specification there is.
I agree! But ask yourself which would result in more destruction, 1000 FT-LBS or 1500 FT-LBS at POI per your statement above.All animals die from lack of oxygenated blood to brain whether that is caused by disruption of the CNS, destruction of lung tissues, or destruction the heart etc. The most consistent way to accomplish that is thru shot placement, penetration, and controlled bullet expansion.
I think you might be reading more into my statement than I intended. Let me clarify. I am not saying it doesn't matter, I am saying it is overrated. There is certainly a difference of delivering 1000 ft lbs versus 1500 ft lbs.I agree! But ask yourself which would result in more destruction, 1000 FT-LBS or 1500 FT-LBS at POI per your statement above.
Like I said, regardless how you feel about it, it is always present working for you, never against you.I think you might be reading more into my statement than I intended. Let me clarify. I am not saying it doesn't matter, I am saying it is overrated. There is certainly a difference of delivering 1000 ft lbs versus 1500 ft lbs.
What I am saying is delivering between 10 to ~15 percent more energy is not going to matter and that placement, penetration, and proper expansion is materially more important.
A number of ELK have fallen with 180 gr SPBT, Using 79.5 gr of H-1000 and LRM Primers. From too close to out about 800+/- yds! Not always the speed, but is Always to Bullet placement! Good shooting, one shot, one Kill!I have been working on an elk load for my 300 Win Mag. I have chosen to shoot either a Nosler Accubond or Barnes TTSX, both in 180 grain. I have worked with H-1000, but even a compressed load gets me to the low 2900 fps range. I have been thinking of trying RL-19, but havent found powder Min-Max amounts yet. Does anyone have those powder numbers or another powder I could try to get over 3000fps? Thanks for any help. I appreciate it.