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AlleninAlaska
BA
[This message has been edited by Brad (edited 04-15-2002).]
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AlleninAlaska
Hornady 129 gr, Interlock SP
Brass: any
47.9 gr RL 19
Federal 210M primer
OAL 2.740"
The deer shot with this load went all of 25 yds before dropping, likely because she was so startled by the rifle blast @ 20 yds she didn't have time to register that she's dead of a blown out heart shot.
This load seems to perform well, regardless of case used (R-P 260 Rem cases, necked up .243 Winchester, R-P, or Federal cases, or necked down 7mm-08/.308 cases of the same brands). All loads loads of this recipe have put 3-5 shots into ~.75-.90" at 100 yds,, if I do my part. The rifle is a Ruger Modell 77 Mk II, 22" barrel.
The usual disclaimer of starting 5-10% lower and working up applies, as well as adjusting the cartridge OAL to suit your rifle.
I'm in the process of working up a 120 gr load.
Hope this helps
[This message has been edited by TXLoader (edited 04-16-2002).]
Did you get complete penetration on that doe? Large exit wound?
Thanks,
BigIron
It was a frontal shot (only view the doe would give me). Entrance wound in the center of the chest; wound channel angled slightly up, tracking right across the heart, left lung, upperlobe of the liver, and exited out the abdomen in front of the left rear leg. Never could find the bullet.
Had the angle been a little straighter, I've no doubt that 129 gr load would have either given complete penetration through the deer, or stopped just short of it, bullet being recovered deep in the bowels.
The doe was ~120-150 lbs, fairly big for a Texas 2 yr old doe. She ran a 50 yd circular track before dropping ~ 25 yds away from where she took the bullet.
For a first field test, that load did impress me, as did terminal performance of the Hornady.
TXLoader
46 grains H4350, Rem .260 brass & Fed 210; seating depth 2.795"
Vel. from the 26" barrel: 2975 fps
Same load, with only seating depth varied to 2.850, clocked 2693 fps from a custom 14" XP-100
The load is compressed and max, so approach with all due caution.