THE ACCURATERELOADING.COM FORUMS


Moderators: Mark
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
Re: Opinions on 35 cal bullets????
 Login/Join
 
one of us
posted
In my opinion the 200 Hornady is not as tough as you'd expect and the 225 Sierra is tougher. I've shot several jackrabbits with the 200 Horn bullets and they are on par with a 243 and 70 BT's for explosion factor. Also shot several coyotes with them and it almost halves them.

I shot one Corsican ram with the 225 Sierra at 272 yards. Could see the bullets pass right thru, but expected it to also. I've bought some Partitions and they shoot great also, just never get the money saved up to shoot huge critters. This will be my summer/fall bear gun and will be stoked with Partitions.

I can load a bit hotter, as my COL is over 3.00" Varget has been real good to me with 59.0 and the 225's. I shoot a grain more which is over book max, but I have a custom barreled rifle and am getting over 2700 fps easily. Primer pockets still fine.
 
Posts: 346 | Location: Las Cruces, New Mexico | Registered: 05 January 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
Have used the 225gr Sierra @2560fps in my Whelen on Wyoming bull moose. Quartering away shot, hit rib on near side, passed throug shoulder on far side, dead moose. For those that want a tougher bullet, I don't see the point for anything in the lower 48 at least. That heavy a chunk of lead at that speed ought to do the trick on whatever walks the woods. Even if the core separates, which shouldn't happen at this velocity, there's enough lead to do the job. Have also taken a elk, with similar pass through result. I'd pick the most accurate 225-250gr bullet, load it to it's most accurate velocity, and go get your critters.
 
Posts: 76 | Location: Wyoming | Registered: 06 July 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
Picture of POP
posted Hide Post
Quote:

I have my hesitations about the 200 Hornady SP's as well. This weekend I shot some off-hand practice shots from my BLR in 358 at 2300 fps. Shooting some rabbit clays at about 30-40 yards stuck in the wet snow was too much: I dug a bullet out of the snow, and there was no jacket. Remaining weight was 121 grains.

Good plinking bullet, but I would not use it on anything but smallish big game. JMO, Dutch.




That is good to know!
 
Posts: 3865 | Location: Cheyenne, WYOMING, USA | Registered: 13 June 2000Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
I'll be shooting the North Fork 250 grain .358 bullet from my Whelen in 3 weeks in Africa, watch for my hunt report begining of May or so for some field reports on it. One more bullet for you to consider.
 
Posts: 1554 | Location: NC | Registered: 10 June 2002Reply With Quote
  Powered by Social Strata  
 


Copyright December 1997-2023 Accuratereloading.com


Visit our on-line store for AR Memorabilia