24 January 2007, 00:37
varmintshooterHornady
Has eny one had eny bad lots of bullets . I bought some 52gr match bullets and they are .027 different beteen the two lots.I am trying to get hornady to replace them but it's costing me more to ship to them then it would to bye new.
24 January 2007, 11:03
varmintshooterI'm measuring with the stony point comparitor
24 January 2007, 22:14
ireload2quote:
Originally posted by varmintshooter:
Has eny one had eny bad lots of bullets . I bought some 52gr match bullets and they are .027 different beteen the two lots.I am trying to get hornady to replace them but it's costing me more to ship to them then it would to bye new.
The question is how do they shoot?
24 January 2007, 23:19
vapodogquote:
Originally posted by varmintshooter:
Has eny one had eny bad lots of bullets . I bought some 52gr match bullets and they are .027 different beteen the two lots.I am trying to get hornady to replace them but it's costing me more to ship to them then it would to bye new.
I've shot a lot of bullets in my time and I've never found Hornady top be second class in the 224 diameters.....darn good bullets.....shoot them and get on with life.
If they don't shoot good for you then buy Nosler or someone else next time.....be sure to measurew them before you shoot them as well.
25 January 2007, 05:33
LE270I'd avoid mixing the two lots, but otherwise load and shoot them as if they are the same.
Sierra bullets have usually given me slightly better accuracy than Hornady ones, but not always. I've had excellent results with some Hornady bullets -- one example is the 100 grain flat-base spitzer in .25 caliber.
For target bullets, Sierra Matchkings are often the most accurate ones available.
25 January 2007, 06:09
buckshotSHOOT 'EM!
Once upon a time I had a batch of Amax bullets come apart in my 22-250, but in all fairness it was caused by the seater plug in an old set of RCBS dies.
Hornady makes Excellent Bullets!