one of us
| Steve,
I've had excellent luck with the Winchester 180 gr. Power Points. Another one to consider would be the Hornady Classic 174 gr.
Good luck and enjoy your great .303...I love mine |
| Posts: 643 | Location: DeRidder, Louisiana USA | Registered: 12 August 2001 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| SteveB My only experience with Speer Hot Core bullets has been with my 9,3x74R double rifle. I load the Speer 270 grain bullet to 2390fps. I have tken a few deer and wild pigs with it. I have only recovered one bullet. It hit a 300 lb pig with a thick gristle plate on a raking shot. The bullet broke the spine and came to rest in the back of the jaw. It had expanded picture perfect. I think at 303 velocities it would be a good bullet. |
| |
one of us
| Thanks for the information. I will go down to Cambodian Tire tomorrow and grab a box of WW 180 Power Points. They cost the same as the Remington 174 UMC ammo and hopefully will be as accurate. Anyone had any experience with the Sierra 180 spitzer bullet in handloads? I pulled some 174 military bullets from the Remington loads and just seated the Sierra's. They were very accurate. Thanks again for the information. Steve |
| Posts: 48 | Location: British Columbia | Registered: 27 July 2002 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| I've shot the Winchester as well. The Simler-Beloit (sp?) shoot well and are cheaper. If you search the web there are a couple Enfield sites with some reloading info including some plinking loads |
| Posts: 1525 | Location: Hilliard Oh USA | Registered: 17 May 2002 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| Quote:
Thanks for the information. I will go down to Cambodian Tire tomorrow and grab a box of WW 180 Power Points. They cost the same as the Remington 174 UMC ammo and hopefully will be as accurate. Anyone had any experience with the Sierra 180 spitzer bullet in handloads? I pulled some 174 military bullets from the Remington loads and just seated the Sierra's. They were very accurate. Thanks again for the information. Steve
The Federal Classic loads feature the 180 Gr Sierra Pro-hunter, and gave absolutely amazing accuracy in my .303 - - - - with one problem.
Accuracy was great - really good - but the bullet won't reliably expand at .303 vel past 150 to 200 yards. Asked Sierra to confirm this and they agreed. They said, if shooting at 200 yds, shoot for "bone" |
| |
one of us
| Thanks for the information on the Sierras. I think though, for my application, that they should be perfect! I primarily want this rifle for short range work (off the muzzle) with iron sights for black bear, moose and deer. Some of the areas where I hunt bear on the west coast of Vancouver Island is very dense vegetation and can also be steep. The ranges tend to be very short sometimes. This year, I had 3 very large black bears within 20 feet and boy did I feel useless with a 26" barreled 338 and a 3-1/2 x 10 scope that I setup for long range hunting. I think (I will later test this theorey on wet phone books) that a tough bullet travelling at moderate velocities should be ideal for these conditions and a Jungle Carbine is one of the fastest handling rifles there are. Thanks again for the info, Steve |
| Posts: 48 | Location: British Columbia | Registered: 27 July 2002 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| Steve B,
I have a friend in Wisconsin who hunts deer with WWII rifles and I saw a box of Winchester spitzer ammunition he had with exposed lead tips and cuts in the jacket towads the tip probably to help expansion. He likes the ammunition a lot and he uses it in his No 4 Enfield as well as in an original No 5 Jungle Carbine that he has managed to acquire in amazing shape and is very happy with them. I'm sure you won't go wrong with these.
Good hunting! |
| |