The Core-Lokt is a good bullet, but using one on an EXPENSIVE African safari is false economy.
Change powders, primers, even brass, but use a controlled-expansion bullet in that .300Win.Mag.!
George
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Shoot straight, shoot often, but by all means, use enough gun!
I suspect the 180 or the wonderfull 200 gr. Nosler partition will shoot in your gun with about 75 to 76 grs. or RL-22, my favorite load. start 10% below that and work up..and save me a lot of grief on this forum..See there, I learnt my lesson Alf and DaggaRon
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Ray Atkinson
If loaded to 3000+fps you are asking for trouble.
My zebra was shot broadside behind the shoulder and the bullet exited. My kudu and gemsbok were taken with the same broadside behind the shoulder shot and the bullet was found under the skin on the far side on both. The two recovered bullets had expanded back to the cannular and retained 68% and 70% of their weight.
If the velocity is 3000+fps I would rather have the partition that shoots 1.75" than the corlokt that shoots 1.00".
To sum it up, yes I believe you are asking too much of the PSPCL.
Jason
[This message has been edited by J Brown (edited 04-22-2002).]
I was shooting 75 grains of R22 with the CT Partition and couldn't get it to shoot. The same load with the Remington bullet shot great. I'll try the 200 grain partitions and, if that doesn't work, I'll look at something else. I didn't really trust the core lock in the 300, but thought I'd ask anyway, figured maybe somebody knew something I didn't.
As a side note, I was working with these two bullets for an elk hunt last fall. My gun has always shot the old Nosler Solid Base 165 grain bullets best of anything I have tried, so I decided to ask Nosler if they would work. The Nosler Tech said the 165 Solid Base bullets would be fine for elk if I stayed away from the shoulder. I used them and got my bull, but I won't ever try that again!
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Happiness is a warm gun