The Accurate Reloading Forums
Ballistic Tips vs Accubonds on Whitetails
10 August 2010, 23:23
Brazos JackBallistic Tips vs Accubonds on Whitetails
I've considered Nosler BT's my go to whitetail bullets for .270 Win (130gr) and .30-06 (150gr) for years. I am not happy to hear that Nosler is dropping them in favor of the Accubonds. The Accubond looks more like a slow opening elk/moose/bear bullet to compete with the Partition.
Do they open up fast enough to drop whitetails as fast as Ballistic tips?
What bullet are other ballistic tip fans planning to migrate to?
Brazos_Jack
11 August 2010, 00:01
Bobby B.I migrated to the Berger 168 Hunting VLD for my 7RM. So far, I've killed 1 moose, about 1/2 dozen Alberta deer, 1 kudu, 2 gemsbok, 1 mtn zebra, 1 blue wildebeest, 1 black wildebeest, 1 red hartebeest, about a dozen springbok, 1 baboon and 1 jackal. All with great results. This fall, I hope to kill black bear and elk with it. Come March, I hope to kill eland and waterbuck with it.
Currently, I'm developing a load for my 260 Rem and the Berger 130 Hunting VLD. I hope to kill deer with it this fall.
Bobby B.
11 August 2010, 00:07
seafire/B17GJack,
the Accubond is a cross between a partition and a Ballistic tip...
it has the ballistic tip front cavity and the core is the more solid one from the partition...
while I love and will use ballistic tips until they are no longer made ( which I don't foresee, but I will call the factory for my own piece of mind here).. migrating to the Accubond, will be nothing but an improvement particularly in the 270 and 06 at the faster velocity potential...if it isn't an improvement, it certainly won't be a detriment....
11 August 2010, 00:21
fredj338Over 2700fps impact vel, I prefer the NAB. For longer range, the NAB should still wrok fine, but you can go to a cup/core Sierra or Speer. or Hornady.
LIFE IS NOT A SPECTATOR'S SPORT!
11 August 2010, 02:18
wistrapperI harvested 2 mature white tailed does last year with 7mm 160 grain Accubonds. Both died in their tracks. Both had severe heart and lung damage. Use them with confidence!
**************************The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first.
11 August 2010, 02:32
Donald NelsonHornaday makes the SST but I have not used it. I use the Combined Technologies silver tip ballistic tip in my .257AI. Have not killed a deer with it but like how it performs on groundhogs. No signs of over expansion but you can tell it opened up. I guess if they will still be around I will migrate to them for my .30 caliber needs. I will say though that for deer the Hornaday 150 grain SPBT works just fine.
Molon Labe
New account for Jacobite
11 August 2010, 07:08
scottfromdallasquote:
Originally posted by Brazos Jack:
I've considered Nosler BT's my go to whitetail bullets for .270 Win (130gr) and .30-06 (150gr) for years. I am not happy to hear that Nosler is dropping them in favor of the Accubonds. The Accubond looks more like a slow opening elk/moose/bear bullet to compete with the Partition.
Do they open up fast enough to drop whitetails as fast as Ballistic tips?
What bullet are other ballistic tip fans planning to migrate to?
Brazos_Jack
Where did you hear they were dropping the BT? I can't believe they would do that.
11 August 2010, 07:33
Rick RMy wife used the 200gr Accubond on her 8x57 last year in South Africa. She got one shot kills on bushpig, impala and gemsbok. We recovered bullets from the bushpig (traveled up the spine into the skull) and the gemsbok (frontal shot) and they looked great.
IMHO they open up faster and better than a Partition but still hold together well enough for deep penetration. I'm trying them this year in my .375 H&H

11 August 2010, 07:45
friarmeierI don't know about B-tips being discontinued; but I can say that I moved away from the 130 gr. Btip in my .270. I was getting almost explosive expansion inside 100 yards...it was just too much blood-shot meat.
I switched to the accubond 140 gr. and run it about 3000ish fps. I've had great expansion and haven't noticed deer taking any longer to die.
I've had some pass-throughs with the accubonds up close and far off; I've recovered some up close and far off. Some with big deer, some with little deer. Not sure what to say about pass-throughs vs. catcher's mitts.
What I can say with confidence is that the recovered bullets opened quickly and as advertised. With pass-throughs, I still had good wound channels.
What I don't have is quite the same amount of blood-shot meat.
Lastly, I sometimes wonder if Accubonds are almost too soft - at least for animals bigger than whitetails in sub 30 calibers. I haven't shot anything bigger than deer with it, but with the expansion I've seen on deer, I would choose my shots carefully on larger animals.
friar
Our liberties we prize, and our rights we will maintain.
11 August 2010, 07:46
GeedubyaRickR,
I like your sig. line
Although I don't sign off, mine is
I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.
GWB
11 August 2010, 08:11
GeedubyaBrazos,
I think I started using Nosler Ballistic tips in earnest in 1999. I've killed sheep, goats, tons of hogs, varmints and whitetails with the Nosler Ballistic tips. They are an accurate bullet in most all my rifles and I load them in 22 cal through 35 cal. Two negatives in my opinion in regards to Ballistic tips. First, if terminal velocity is over 2800 fps, there tends to be a lot of bloodshot meat. Second, where I hunt in the Texas hill country, it is very dense. If a critter isn't DRT and there is no blood trail within 5 to 10 feet of the point of impact, it is very easy to lose an animal. After a couple years of using ballistic tips almost exclusively, I noticed that I was tending to partitions. Since the accubonds have come on the market I haven't looked back.
They are as accurate in most all my rifles as a ballistic tip and penetrate like a partition, and are relatively inexpensive.
At the risk of offending some here with dead animal pix, here is a post I made a while back in regards to Accubonds............
Lets see, Accubonds, what's not to like. Aerodynamic, shoot well out of numerous calibers and rifles, are not as frangible as ballistic tips, leave good blood trails
and best of all,
they
kill
stuff
DRT
35 whelen, 225 gr. accubond
35 whelen, 225 gr. accubond
9.3 x 62, 250 gr. accubond
7mm-08, 140 gr. accubond
7 mag, 140 gr accubond
257 bob, 110 gr. accubond
375 H&H, 260 gr. accubond
7 stw, 140 gr. accubond
338 rum. 225 gr. accubond
Anyway, I think I can say that they work for me.
GWB
PS: each animal pictured above was DRT. NO Tracking. Complete penetration
11 August 2010, 08:39
Cary HowardDo any of you guys like Barnes bullets? I've recovered 9 Barnes bullets shot of my 25-06 that retained 100% of their weight. They were 100 grn TSX that weighed 100 grns when I pulled them out of the deer! I haven't had a deer take even one step after I pull the trigger since I switched from Nosler!!!!!
11 August 2010, 09:33
BrandoI prefer the accubonds over any other round for my hunting rifles...The BT's just tend to loose alot of weight when you shoot an animal. I lost all hope in the BT's when I took a bite of backstrap and got a nice chunk of copper jacket in my mouth and chipped a tooth. Since then I have used nothing but accubonds and they retain in excess of 95% of there weight all the time.
11 August 2010, 20:33
Paul TunkisMy wife and I used 130gr Nosler Accubonds in our 270's last year to kill 7 whitetail does, a mule deer buck and 3 antelope. Velocity with either rifle is around 3000fps. Ranges were from 50 to 350 yds. All were one shot DRT. I did recover one bullet, antelope lengthwise, front to rear at a 350yds bullet was in ham...
As a comparison I have 4 recovered 150gr Nosler Partitions that weighed in at about 100grs. The 130gr. Accubond also weighed in at about 100gr. Small sample for sure, but interesting.
What are we using this year? I will be using the 130gr. Accubonds and she will be using either those or some 140gr Ballistic tips that shoot well in her rifle. They also shoot well in mine but mine likes the 130 Accubonds best.
11 August 2010, 20:57
GeedubyaCary,
I load Barnes TSX's in several cals. Perhaps it is a subconscious thing with me. They shoot excellent in the rifles I have loaded them in, However, I lost two hogs that I shot with 140 gr. tsx's I hit them high and evidently the bullets just penciled through. Also, it took too long for two deer I shot with same rifle to expire. Small sample but never the less.........
The A/B's work fine for me at almost half the cost. As I load for a large number of calibers, that in turn increases my costs. They have become my bullet of choice in the gamut that runs between 25 and 375 cals.
GWB
GWB
Cary, Yes, I load a lot of Barnes bullets. One of my favorites. I've never lost an animal with them. I have lost a mule deer buck that was shot with the AB.
My brother has killed a lot of deer in the south with Barnes bullets I loaded for his rifle. He's never lost one either. But then, Btips have served us both well also.
Ted Kennedy's car has killed more people than my guns
12 August 2010, 02:01
MikelravyIf you like BT for deer (and I do) I think you will be satisfied with ABs. They seem to shoot as well for me and are great for deer.
12 August 2010, 03:39
jeffeossoi tend to be a bit simple .. and if nosler spent millions to develop a better BT, then why not use the accubonds?
I don't shoot BTs at game i intend to eat, anymore.. then again, they don't make a bigbore accubond, YET
12 August 2010, 11:12
Brazos JackI may try accubonds but many comments here are why I question it for 125 lb whitetails. Used on Kudu, Used on Caribou. There is no way I'd use a BT on these animals. If it opens up fast enough to be optimum on whitetail it is not going to perform well on such big animals. Yes, you can kill deer with FMJ bullets. But - not every time but on average - they will travel further after the hit with such bullets. AB's cause less bloodshot meat than BT - again the AB is dumping less energy in the small animal than the BT - which is why BT's are known for spectacular kills on sub-350 lb animals. The AB sounds like a great elk, Kudu (350-1000 lb animal) bullet. Probably better in the 350-600 lb range than the partition - which has been my go-to for these bigger animals.
I may be wrong, Maybe it opens up on whitetails just as fast as BT's but just holds together. But the radical difference in bloodshot meat tells me this probably is not the case. I think the AB sounds like a great bullet. Just maybe only an "OK" whitetail bullet.
I hope my comments won't be misconstrued as combative. I am just asking questions and looking to hear from other hunters. Some here are indicating going to other cup and core bullets. I'm surprised by the number migrating to AB's for whitetail so it may open faster and work better on small animals than is normal for bonded core designs.
12 August 2010, 11:30
RustyI'm now shooting Accubonds in 257 Roberts, 30-06, 8X57RJS, 375 H&H. I took a nice hog last January with the 8X57. Impressive results.
I like the Accubond. I have always been a Nosler Partition fan, but now shoot Accubonds when I can.
Whitetail Deer, no problem!
Rusty
We Band of Brothers!
DRSS, NRA & SCI Life Member
"I am rejoiced at my fate. Do not be uneasy about me, for I am with my friends."
----- David Crockett in his last letter (to his children), January 9th, 1836
"I will never forsake Texas and her cause. I am her son." ----- Jose Antonio Navarro, from Mexican Prison in 1841
"for I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." Thomas Jefferson
Declaration of Arbroath April 6, 1320-“. . .It is not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.”
12 August 2010, 13:23
Brazos JackRusty,
In your opinion, would you use AB's in .375 H&H on eland and first shot on cape buff. Or would you revert to partitions on these and use the AB's on kudu and below?
Brazos_Jack
12 August 2010, 15:44
GeedubyaBJ,
you asked, and were answered. What you do with the info is up to you.
GWB
12 August 2010, 16:49
aerostarpThey are as accurate in most all my rifles as a ballistic tip and penetrate like a partition, and are relatively inexpensive.
At the risk of offending some here with dead animal pix, here is a post I made a while back in regards to Accubonds............
Geedubya said:
"Lets see, Accubonds, what's not to like. Aerodynamic, shoot well out of numerous calibers and rifles, are not as frangible as ballistic tips, leave good blood trails
and best of all, they kill stuff DRT."
Got to agree 100%. Loaded the AB up in the 7RM and Partitions in the .243 and love the way they shoot and hold together on game. I find the AB to be more accurate than the Partitions.
**********************
>
I'd rather be a CONSERVATIVE NUTJOB than a Liberal with no NUTS & No JOB
>
12 August 2010, 17:06
GerryI use alot of Nosler bullets, BT's, AB's & Partitions - they all have their place.
My Acid Test for any new barrel or rifle is an appropriately weight for caliber Nosler Ballistic Tip. They usually give me a good indication right away of the new piece's accuracy level/potential.
I loved the 250 gr. BT's in .366" and their terminal performance was anything but "explosive". This has also been my experience with BT's in calibers above .308".
In .332" & 366" have gone to the Accubond; their accuracy & terminal perfomance is excellent.
For .375" I prefer a heavier bullet and haven't received the penetration with the 260 grainers I receive from other 300 gr. Cup & Core bullets.
I've never had an accuracy issue with Partitions - they shoot right up there with BT's & AB's in my loads but I don't use them for accuracy testing simply when I desire to develop a specific load.
I will admit; as another poster mentioned that in place of 165 gr. BT's in .30/06 Sprg. I hoped up a notch to the CT Ballistic Silvertip 168 grainers and received oustanding accuracy and better penetration than with a BT in a .30/06 Sprg.
Cheers,
Number 10
12 August 2010, 18:26
Rob1SGI have used Partitions,Accubonds, and Interbonds in several rifles. My experience is Partitions enter blow off the tip (major damage there) and then penetrate through.Accubonds enter violent expansion penetrate well but not as far as a partition. Interbonds enter pancake but hold together and have less pentration than the Accubonds. If you like the bullet to stop inside the animal then Interbonds are a better bullet for you.
12 August 2010, 18:47
Karooquote:
In your opinion, would you use AB's in .375 H&H on eland and first shot on cape buff. Or would you revert to partitions on these and use the AB's on kudu and below?
Accubonds are very good bullets for their intended purpose: thin-skinned game at moderate to fast velocity.
For eland they need to be relatively heavy for caliber, I'd say.
As for buffalo, there are many much better-suited bullets.
12 August 2010, 18:54
jeffeossoJack,
bullet placement is always critical. Let's take an extreme example .. 458 lott solids on hogs and whitetails -- bang - flog, DRT ..
it is my studied opinion that a bullet should retain at LEAST 75% of bullet weight, under all shooting conditions, to be considered a well contructed bullet IN THAT PURPOSE - BT's never do that.
Exploding bullets, which BT's do, are not what *I* shoot at things I wish to eat.
BTW, I have also shot game with smaller bore solids, at high vels... guess what? velocity causes blood shot, NOT deteonating bullets .. as I have also shot hogs with very light for caliber .458 copper bullets .. bullet looses its petals, and doesn't cause 1/2 the bloodshot damage.
AB's hold up better than BTs - its a fact
12 August 2010, 19:00
Geedubyahere is an example of a 25 cal 110 gr accubond shot from a 257 roberts on a Texas hill country whitetail doe. Probably between 90 and 100 lbs. She was shot while walking broadside and just a little in front of where I was sitting. Entry on leftside, exit on right side. Ran about 30 yds. and piled up.
If it had been a ballistic tip it probably would not have an exit wound.
A partition would be about the same. One inch or so in and out. Noticeable bloodshot meat around entry due to velocity and range.
GWB
12 August 2010, 19:38
RustyBJ,
I have not used the on Plains Game, yet. I intend to on my next trip. A good friend and forum member BobC has used them on African Plains Game and was very impressed with the results he got with Accubonds and his 375 H&H.
Please do a forum search or send him a PM. He can give you his results.
Rusty
We Band of Brothers!
DRSS, NRA & SCI Life Member
"I am rejoiced at my fate. Do not be uneasy about me, for I am with my friends."
----- David Crockett in his last letter (to his children), January 9th, 1836
"I will never forsake Texas and her cause. I am her son." ----- Jose Antonio Navarro, from Mexican Prison in 1841
"for I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." Thomas Jefferson
Declaration of Arbroath April 6, 1320-“. . .It is not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.”
12 August 2010, 20:36
tasunkawitkoquote:
As a comparison I have 4 recovered 150gr Nosler Partitions that weighed in at about 100grs.
i don't know if this is a fair comparison - the partition is designed to exactly what you describe.
12 August 2010, 21:16
Antelope SniperJack, the Ballistic Tip was specifically designed for Deer sized game. One a broadside shot, it's difficult to find faster killing deer bullet.
The Accubond had a bonded core and a thicker jacket then the Ballistic tip. If you put a BT, and AB of the same caliber and weight side-by-side, the AB will will a touch longer. The maximun recommended impact velocity for a BT is 3100 fps, where the heavier accubond has no maximum impast velocity. This makes the AB well suited for heavier game, and the hyper velocity super mags.
In some of the larger calibers, the BT has been replaced with the AB. As an example in .338, Nosler has discontinued the 200gr BT in favor of the 200gr AB. At about the same time, they also introduced the 180gr BT in .338. IMO, 180gr is a better deer weight bullet, and more inline with the stated purpose of the BT, i.e. to be the ultimate deer slayer.
Overall, but are great products, and server their purpose in a good product mix. I see no reason for Nosler to discontinue either one.
13 August 2010, 05:00
NakihunterI have shot a 350lbs black bear in Canada with a 7mm mag using Barnes TSX 160gr & it worked great even at 300 yards with incredible penetration through the back thigh bone & exited from the chest. I have also shot various deer like mule deer, fallow deer & red deer with the TSX in 7mm and they all dropped to the shot at ranges from 40 to 250 meters. Rifles were 7mm08 using 150gr or 7mm mag using 160gr.
I think that the Accubond will also perform well. My friend has used them on big Sambar deer here (about the size of elk) & has had great results in his 7mm WSM with 160 gr ABs.
"When the wind stops....start rowing. When the wind starts, get the sail up quick."
13 August 2010, 12:31
Brazos Jackquote:
Originally posted by Antelope Sniper:
Jack, the Ballistic Tip was specifically designed for Deer sized game. One a broadside shot, it's difficult to find faster killing deer bullet.
The Accubond had a bonded core and a thicker jacket then the Ballistic tip. If you put a BT, and AB of the same caliber and weight side-by-side, the AB will will a touch longer. The maximun recommended impact velocity for a BT is 3100 fps, where the heavier accubond has no maximum impast velocity. This makes the AB well suited for heavier game, and the hyper velocity super mags.
In some of the larger calibers, the BT has been replaced with the AB. As an example in .338, Nosler has discontinued the 200gr BT in favor of the 200gr AB. At about the same time, they also introduced the 180gr BT in .338. IMO, 180gr is a better deer weight bullet, and more inline with the stated purpose of the BT, i.e. to be the ultimate deer slayer.
Overall, but are great products, and server their purpose in a good product mix. I see no reason for Nosler to discontinue either one.
Antelope Sniper,
That makes sense and I hope you're right. The only BT's I'm concerned with are the .270 130gr and the .308 150gr. I use for whitetails, though I'd like to see a 150gr 8mm added. As long as they remain available, I see the AB's being better for 200-250 .338 or any 9.3 or .375 application I might have.
13 August 2010, 16:48
jeffeossoJack,
your mind was already made up, wasn't it?
13 August 2010, 17:26
scottfromdallasI think the simple answer is;
1. Either will kill a Texas whitetail DRT.
2. Accubond was was built to approximate the partition. Where one in appropriate for game, so is the other.
13 August 2010, 18:19
Brazos Jackquote:
Originally posted by jeffeosso:
Jack,
your mind was already made up, wasn't it?
Jeff,
No it wasn't. And I had heard from what I thought was a reliable source that the entire BT line was being dropped. So I was looking for something that would mirror its performance on whitetail size game. It was the responses here that told me that the AB, while better for bigger animals, is not that bullet.
13 August 2010, 18:55
eezridrHave been shooting 130 NP's and 130 AB's through my many 270's for untold years. Use Win Brass, Fed 215's and 61.5 gr RL-22 for about 3200 FPS (Chrono'd) Max load.
Instant death to whitetails! NP's or AB's. Never had one move, however I hit where I aim.
These two projectiles do not pattern at the same point of aim. Pick one and stick with it.
EZ
13 August 2010, 19:54
jeffeossoJack,
the BTs will be phased out, just like barnes X vs TSX
13 August 2010, 21:13
Brazos Jackquote:
Originally posted by jeffeosso:
Jack,
the BTs will be phased out, just like barnes X vs TSX
Jeff,
Thanks for the clarification. That is what I originally had been told but some of the posts here indicated otherwise. I'll continue my search for a true apples and apples replacement.
13 August 2010, 21:41
tasunkawitkojack - i have no experience with the SST, but hornady makes an accurate bullet and the SST seems to be a good alternative to the BT - might be worth a try.