18 October 2002, 05:41
Dino32HR7mm, 120 gr. BOAT tail ???
I've looked high and I've looked low, but for the life of me, I CANNOT find a .284, 120 gr.
boat tail bullet for my 7mm TCU.
I want it to be copper-jacketed; HP or FMJ is preferred; SP, BT OK.
Does ANYBODY know of a source for these buggers??
Thanks.
[ 10-17-2002, 20:42: Message edited by: Dino32HR ]18 October 2002, 06:26
<Elliot Viker>I know it is not a fmj or a hp, but have you tried the nosler BT or the hornady ssp or for softer and light weight stuff the hornady 120gr flat base HP. The last is a great perfromer in my 10 inch 7tcu, but is too soft for anything bigger than fox. The orginal Hornady ssp with the non-plastic tip was a great deer bullet and the nosler and the hornady sst are also good deer and down sized bullets. I am assuming you are punching paper since the fmj looking, try the nosler. It behaves like a hp and has a boattail and tend to shoot well.
18 October 2002, 10:13
<1GEEJAY>Hey'
Barnes has a 120 XBT,that is the 120 I could find.Hope this helps out.
1geejay
www.shooting-hunting.com19 October 2002, 03:33
<eldeguello>I used to use the Nosler 120-grain solid base boattail (SBBT) for a deer load in a 7X57mm mauser (3100+ FPS). It was too destructive!!
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19 October 2002, 03:53
<eldeguello>Yes, it would probably be much better at those velocities.
22 October 2002, 03:48
Dino32HRAll -
Thank you for your input. I should have been more specific of my intended use. The 120 gr'ers are for IHMSA Big Bore, for use on the chickens, pigs & turkeys. I have a 139 gr. Hornady boat tail for the rams. So - no considerations are necessary as far as killing power, or whether the manufacturer classifies them as a hunting bullet or not - memories of the Match King discussion !
I JUST shot some of the Sierra 120 gr. flat-base SP's (Sierra # 1900 - I think) yesterday. First time I ever made the 120's. Tried several iterations and got good results with 16.5 gr. of H4227, CCI 400 primer, Federal brass. 17 gr's of H4227 was a bit too hot as I was exceeding 1900 fps with a 10" barrel ands started to see some evidence of cratering on the primer. 16.5 grains gave me sub-1/2" group @ 50 yards.
First - The reason I want to use boattails is a selfish one - THEY'RE EASIER TO LOAD. My RCBS seating die doesn't give you any room or opportunity to keep the bullet straight on the brass as it begins to seat - it's too far in the die to hold it. I just switched to 139 gr boattails and they are a dream !
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Go in nice and smooth. I just tend to cringe
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when I hear or feel the base of the bullet catching on the mouth of the case because it is not in perfect alignment. And yes - I do slightly chamfer the case mouth.
Second - I'm cheap, uh - I mean I work hard to control my costs, yeah, that's it !
![[Wink]](images/icons/wink.gif)
I really can't afford to spend big bucks on Nosler or Barnes projectiles for knockin' down steel. If I was using it on game and looking for that one-shot kill, I would absolutley buy the best. Can I justify a premium bullet for shooting steel? Shooting 100 a month or so? No.
After looking into the cost of using the 120's long term, in the volume I'll be needing, I'm now looking for some hard-cast lead, gas-checked bullets in this size & weight. No luck yet, but I'm not done looking.
Thanks (once again) to you all for your responses and input. Appreciate it greatly !
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