Nosler accubond vs Barnes TTSX

I bought a couple box's of TTSX 150's for my .308 to be used on whitetail. Now I am having the same second thoughts.
Wondering if I shouldn't have gone lighter or with a different quicker expanding bullet??? Damn second guessing...
 
I have had excellent results with accubonds on moose from close up out to 565 yards. They have never failed me, usually well mushroomed and often ends up in the hide on the opposite side of entry. Mind you it was 180 grainers from a 300 win, but i believe the lightest bullet i weighed was around 130 grains after retrieval. I have had ballistic silvertips completely separate lead core from copper jacket into two pieces on two occasions. Something to keep an eye on is load data for the Barnes bullets, Hodgdon sometimes lists lighter powder charge weights for Barnes bullets as opposed to others of the same weight. I assume the reason has something to do with the bullet being solid copper. Barnes bullets do seem to be highly regarded as great game takers though i have had no experience with them personally.

Yes. The reason is density related. Typically, a 180 grains bullet of solid copper will be much longer than his jacketed lead counterpart.
A .30 caliber, 180 grains AB measures about 1.380" while the Barnes TTSXBT measures 1.550". Even the 0.30 cal. 165 grains TTSXBT (1.430") is longer than the 180 AB.
So, for the same OAL, the Barnes TTSX will have to be seated much deepenr into the case, hence the less powder in the case.
 
Any decent C&C bullet will work fine for deer. Why not buy some of them in 130gr for that purpose and get some TSX/TTSX or Partitions for moose and bear later?

That will give you a cheaper load for deer hunting and range bwasting.

This is more like what I would reccomend.

If having your rifle loaded with TSX's is going to give you that extra edge of confidence, then go ahead and do it, but I've shot several black bears, caribou and moose over the years with plain cup-and-core 130's, 150's, and a couple with older 160 grain KKSP's, and never found the .270 to fall short. Most guys who have never seen it have no idea how deadly a 130 grain cup-and-core bullet into the ribs is on big game.
 
Both are great bullets, buy both and choose the one that shoots betters.....you can go with a lighter and faster combo using the TTSX if you wish.

As stubblejumper said, "Accubond expands better at lower velocities, and the TTSX holds together better, and penetrates better, at high velocities."
 
Since I am still extremely confused, I will just get both (when I can find them) and use the one that give me the tightest group!

I can't source them at the moment or powder, might have to go whit N160 since at the moment it's the only thing available.
 
My experience is that the Accubond has not been as accurate as the TTSX/TSX or even the Partition. Last box of Accubonds was even more expensive than the TSX as well. Lately I've been using the Berger Hunting bullet and have been very happy with accuracy and very quick kills on deer and Black bear.
 
I would go AB..

I am from the school of dumping entire energy of the bullet inside the animal....however IF the bullet passes through you will get a better blood trail



Nosler Ballistic tips have NEVER failed me nor the AB devastating kills.
 
The Accubond expands better at lower velocities, and the TTSX holds together better, and penetrates better, at high velocities.

Can somebody explain to me how does the above comment translate to distance? Which one performs/functions better on a black bear or moose at a short range of, say... 40 yards?
 
Quote Originally Posted by stubblejumper View Post
The Accubond expands better at lower velocities, and the TTSX holds together better, and penetrates better, at high velocities.

Can somebody explain to me how does the above comment translate to distance? Which one performs/functions better on a black bear or moose at a short range of, say... 40 yards?

I'll give it a try, since I have nothing to do right now.
The entry level, cheaper bullets called 'cup and core' are good bullets but at high velocities that todays magnums generate, they can come apart easily and if they don't penetrate enough they can blow up on the surface and not deliver a killing shot. So, they came out with bonded bullets, more expensive but stay together better at high velocity and penetrate better.

Copper bullets are by nature tough bullets and the higher the impact velocity is, the better they will expand. So, when the velocity drops off at longer ranges, they don't expand as well. The manufacturers give a minimum velocity for effective expansion, some where around 1800-2000 f/sec. So, as stubblejumper said, the Accubond will expand much better than the TTSX at lower velocities.

Your question about the 40 yd shot on a bear or moose depends on what cartridge it is being delivered with. If it's a high velocity magnum then the TTSX will hold together better at high velocities and penetrate into the vitals. If it's a lower velocity round, then the Accubond will probably do a better job. 40 yds is pretty close and both would probably do a good job at that distance on a moose or bear. Manufacturers strive to make a 'do all bullet' so it will work at close and far, high and low velocities, and make lots of money in the process.

There are many variables in hunting situations (thick hide, thin hide, close, far, heavy animal or light) so you have to get familiar with the various bullets on the market and choose the one that best fits your hunting situation as the OP is trying to do and it can be frustrating.
 
I shot AB's of various calibers at a very short distance (more or less 25 meters) in fir logs - following the grain flow, which is much stronger than any animal in N-A - and they all kept at least 70% of their initial weight, expanded at over 2 X the initial caliber and kept together, mushrooming like if it came from a dream. I shot Barnes in the same kind of logs, it opened about 2 X the diameter in petals.
So, take it as you want, they both do the trick.

BTW, I still have to recover a (9.3mm) AB bullet from a game. I never recovered a Barnes neither.
If the AB is too expensive, you still can go InterBond of the same weight. They also work.

I shot Black Bears with both bullets and I can't tell the diffence, except that the front of the AB explodes at contact (hence it's weight loss) as I regularly found thiny pieces of copper in the abdominal cavity.
 
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Yes. The reason is density related. Typically, a 180 grains bullet of solid copper will be much longer than his jacketed lead counterpart.
A .30 caliber, 180 grains AB measures about 1.380" while the Barnes TTSXBT measures 1.550". Even the 0.30 cal. 165 grains TTSXBT (1.430") is longer than the 180 AB.
So, for the same OAL, the Barnes TTSX will have to be seated much deepenr into the case, hence the less powder in the case.

Thanks for clearing that up!
 
I have been using the AB for a few years now in both my 7mm RM and my 7X57. They have been really good for me. I have not had to tack many animals that is for sure.
 
i'm thinking your rifle might make the choice for you. my t3 7 mag likes 139 gmx more than any other bullet inc ab's. my 280 cooper will shoot 140 acubonds better than any mono i have tried. try them both and let your rifle make the choice for you. if your lucky both will shoot well.
 
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