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herters 243 bullets

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13 October 2011, 09:23
hvrhunter
herters 243 bullets
I went to an estate sale and bought these in 70 and 100 gr ,who made herters bullets,the boxes looked really old.
13 October 2011, 15:08
rolltop
are the boxes marked as to what country they are made in?
13 October 2011, 15:28
.404
So years ago,I did the same thing,however I found them to be brittle, with age I guess.They broke-up in water jug pentration test...went back to my favorites..Horady's


I pray for mud on my boots the day I die...
Go see the nights of Africa.....
13 October 2011, 16:47
carpetman1
Those Herter Bullets will weigh over 200 grains by the time they get all the adjectives (Name) stamped on them. Herters Model Perfect Deluxe Presentation Grade Supreme Custom Waist Sonic Hudson Bay Special. That's the short version--the actual name will be longer.
14 October 2011, 01:56
plainsman456
I have several of the 70 grain bullets and they shoot well in 2 243,s I have tried them in.
They don't like coyotes though,they died when exposed to them.
14 October 2011, 05:47
MickinColo
quote:
Originally posted by hvrhunter:
I went to an estate sale and bought these in 70 and 100 gr ,who made herters bullets,the boxes looked really old.
Herter’s stuff is pretty old and there is a reason why the original owner didn't shoot them up. They were not the best bullets available in the middle of the last century when most bullets sucked. They are relics, collector items, and more valuable as such.
14 October 2011, 22:11
Stonecreek
Assuming that the price was "right", I would have bought them, too.

As with any bullet, you won't know how they shoot until you try them. The Herter's bullets represented to be "spitzers" were more like semi-spitzers with a somewhat short ogive and slightly rounded nose. While that feature limits their B.C. a bit, it also makes them less sensitive to other factors and helps them with potential accuracy.

If you shoot a deer with the 100 grainers it will likely die. However, I would simply use them for more informal shooting and hunting like coyotes or other targets that don't require much in the way of bullet performance. As plainsman says, coyotes exposed to them tend to expire prematurely.

Also be aware that there's a bit of a collector's market for Herter's stuff. The bullets were often packaged in a plain dark red box with no logo, but if the Herter's logo is printed on the box then you might want to market them to interested parties.