I'm not certain, but the Speer TNT does a pretty good job of flying apart in most calibers. I have shot paper with the 70 gr 6mm TNT, but have not used it on PDs, so I can't really say. The .224/50 TNT is a little bomb.
Any of the polymer-tipped bullets -- 55 Nosler B Tip, 55 Sierra Blitzking, or 58 gr Hornady V-Max should do a pretty good job, even at somewhat reduced velocities.
Posts: 13349 | Location: Henly, TX, USA | Registered: 04 April 2001
I have used a few bullets in my 6 tcu, I have done well with the 55 gr nosler, 70 gr nosler, 65 gr vmax and the 70 gr blitzking, all of the bullets have rpoven to be quite accurate with the 70 gr blitzking leading the pack.
The 55 gr nosler is very frangible, on larger rock chucks with good solid body hits it usually doesn't exit. There will be a small drop of blood where the bullet went in and no exit but the chuck will be totally mushed inside kinda like a bag of jello.
The 65 vmax and the 70 gr btip and blitzking will exit and tear the chucks up pretty bad. I have been leaning toward the 70 gr bullets for a little better wind resistance and they seem to shoot a little more consistent for me.
My 6 tcu barrel is a 16" bullberry, it is very accurate and gets very good velocities, the 55 gr will run 3200 fps and the 70 grainers just nicely hit 3000 fps.
You have been given good advice so far, but there's one bullet that I must add to the list: the good ol' Hornady 70 grain SX. It's quite frangible and has always given me stellar accuracy, especially at 6 TCU and 6x45 velocities.
Bobby Μολὼν λαβέ The most important thing in life is not what we do but how and why we do it. - Nana Mouskouri
Posts: 9592 | Location: Shiner TX USA | Registered: 19 March 2002
Originally posted by R Flowers: I would suggest you try the 58 grain Hornady V-Max. ...... They are much more impressive than the 55 grain Ballistic Tips.
I would agree the BT is not a massive expander - I have no hesitation in using 55gr ballistic tips at a MV of 3,400fps on 55lb roe deer. They do not explode and exit on occasion.
Bobby, et al, What powder are you using to get the velocities you're getting? I'm using a rifle, so maybe there are better powder choices for a rifle than for pistol loads.
With bullets of 70 grains and up, I've poured more H335 into the little 6mm wildcats (6mm-.223, 6 TCU, 6x47, 6x47 IMP, etc.) than any other powders combined and have always been rewarded with terrific results -- and that is for both rifle-length tubes of 18-24" and pistols barrels of 13-15" as well. It is far and away my favorite powder for this class of cartridges.
And I use nothing but Rem 7 1/2s as well.
Bobby Μολὼν λαβέ The most important thing in life is not what we do but how and why we do it. - Nana Mouskouri
Posts: 9592 | Location: Shiner TX USA | Registered: 19 March 2002
H-322 and N-135. But don't look past H335. It does best with the 70+ bullets but can do quite well with the lighter projectiles as well. But for me, when I did use the lighter bullets, H-322 seemed to be just the ticket with N-135 coming in a distant second.
Bobby Μολὼν λαβέ The most important thing in life is not what we do but how and why we do it. - Nana Mouskouri
Posts: 9592 | Location: Shiner TX USA | Registered: 19 March 2002
Anyone try RL-7? It's all I've ever used for the light bullets. It's good for accuracy. I just wonder if I can get better velocity with another powder. I'll look into h-322.