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| Lou, I've had good luck with the Hornady 250 round nose and reloader 15. They open up easily and cause less meat damage than some of the lighter bullets. Good luck on your hunt here in PA.... Paul. |
| Posts: 323 | Location: Northeastern, PA | Registered: 21 June 2002 |
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| My Whelen is the Rem 700 classic w/ a Leupold 2-7 on top. It'll put 3 of those 200 gr. Hornady's under an inch, so I'll probably stick with that load. I have some time, so may try and work up a load with the 225 Nosler BTs as I can always fall back on the 200 Hornady load. Thanks for all the replys!
-Lou |
| Posts: 333 | Location: Dallas, TX, USA | Registered: 15 January 2001 |
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| Quote:
i use the sierra 225, it is a fragile bullet & perfect for deer & the whelen..but the exit hole with any bullet will be bigger than a 270.
Really? I've had basketball size exit holes with a .270 and 150gr Ballistic Tips! |
| Posts: 3097 | Location: Louisiana | Registered: 28 November 2001 |
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| i use the sierra 225, it is a fragile bullet & perfect for deer & the whelen..but the exit hole with any bullet will be bigger than a 270. |
| Posts: 1125 | Location: near atlanta,ga,usa | Registered: 26 September 2001 |
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| You can't beat the 250g Hornady rn out of the Whelen on Montana deer and elk under 300 yds. It's very accurate bullet behind BLC-2 powder in the rifles I load for myself and friends. I don't have my load data on hand since i'm in Iraq. You have the "whump" factor with meat on the table. The 250g Nosler Partition is the other bullet I shoot powered by IMR 4320. |
| Posts: 73 | Location: North Central / Montana | Registered: 25 April 2002 |
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| Quote:
Lou, I've had good luck with the Hornady 250 round nose and reloader 15. They open up easily and cause less meat damage than some of the lighter bullets.
I'll second this combination. Not that this bullet won't expand properly, because it will, but one of the advantages of the .35 over .277 or other similar calibers is the use of a "pre-expanded" bullet. The larger hole does its job. |
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