one of us
| From an old Reloader ( Alliant) manual, I have used the load of 30 grains of RL 7 for an MV of about 2100 fps.
Recoil is unbelievably light and that 160 grain bullet actually seems to like those lower MVs for penetration than higher velocity.
Either the Sierra or the Hornady. I prefer the Sierra in my militiary 6.5 Swede, but the Hornady gets loaded in my commercially produced 6.5's.
Accuracy was also fantastic.
good luck cheers and good shooting seafire |
| Posts: 2889 | Location: Southern OREGON | Registered: 27 May 2003 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| I took my moose last year with a Remington Classic in 6.5x55. I also have three Swedish M96s in this caliber. It's my favorite. For large game I shoot the Sierra 160gr. SPSP (round nose to me). I can get about 2500fps with this bullet, and it raises merry olde hell with an animals boiler room. Incidently I've seen two moose lost in recent years that were nailed with a .300Win. Mag. Both were lung shots judging by the clearness of the blood. Both made it back into the brush and disappeared. I'm sure they ultimately died from the shot. I guess bigger is not always better. Best wishes.
Cal - Montreal |
| Posts: 1866 | Location: Montreal, Canada | Registered: 01 May 2003 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| I shoot 6.5x55s a BUNCH, and I've used them with every conceivable bullet weight and at the entire spectrum of usable velocities. But in all honesty, I can say I have never, ever found a legitimate use for the 160 grain bullets. They don't transform the Swede a brush-buster, they won't penetrate significantly more than the 140 grain bullets, and they certainly won't add more lethality to the equation. For me, the 140s are just the ticket, and with the high sectional density and modest velocity the Swede works at, you'll get excellent tissue destruction, tremendous penetration (no premium bullets needed here) and game-dropping ability that must be seen to be appreciated.
And, you can keep the loads mild if you so choose. Push a 140 grainer at 2450-2500 fps, and you'll get a low-recoil round that gives you positive deer or hog medicine out to at least 250 yards. |
| Posts: 9438 | Location: Shiner TX USA | Registered: 19 March 2002 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| Quote:
... Does the 160gn RN open up at relatively slow speeds, or do you recomend another?
160 grs is the proper bullet weight for that calibre. Here in Sweden it is the most common weight in the 6,5x55, and in this week some ten thousands of swedidh moose are bagged with it.
Go for it - it will do a good job. Fritz |
| Posts: 846 | Location: Sweden | Registered: 19 April 2001 |
IP
|
|
One of Us
| The big Hornaday 160s are a 6.5mm Mannlciher-Schoenauer bullet, meant for a slower cartridge than the 6.5x55mm. I have used these Hornadays in cartridges up to and including the 6.5-06, and found them quite accurate, though never used on deer. Have stuck with the 140 grainers. However, IF you should come upon any 6.5mm RWS 156 grain H-Mantle bullets, They have been the ticket in the old Mannlicher, yielding spectacular kills on Axis deer. If you see those RWS slugs and don't want them, send them to me!! LLS |
| Posts: 996 | Location: Texas | Registered: 14 October 2004 |
IP
|
|
one of us
| What Bobby said. JCN |
| Posts: 7158 | Location: Snake River | Registered: 02 February 2004 |
IP
|
|