Might want to anneal those cases before fireforming.I also had one round where the neck split a tiny bit. Nit sure on the cause of that but the other 48 rounds fired and formed beautifully.
Might want to anneal those cases before fireforming.I also had one round where the neck split a tiny bit. Nit sure on the cause of that but the other 48 rounds fired and formed beautifully.
A 200 grain tsx at 3400 is no joke!
I'm not a light for caliber guy. I prefer higher sectional density and increased momentum.
A 200 grain tsx at 3400...
A 200 grain tsx at 3400 is no joke!
RJYea ???? Good LUCK with that !RJ
oops my bad, that 4 should be a 2.


I can understand both sides of the fence, personally ive been using the light for caliber ttsx/tsx in a few different magnum cartrdiges with some pretty spectacular results on big game. the 80gr ttsx out of a 257wby at 4000fps is a personal favorite. I shot a big black bear head on through center of the chest at a 100yards and it exited the back hip, over 5 1/2' of penetration and the bear just flopped and never moved again. Ive also killed a caribou and handful of whitetails and sheep with the 110gr ttsx from a 270wsm with the exact same results. Buddy used my rifle on northern bc/Yukon border moose and penetration was over 5' at a quartering to angle. These light for caliber ttsx have been very good for me at any angle and shot distance in order to reach the vitals. Just personal preference.
How do you find the fast/light tsx bullets fair for meat damage?
I was getting 3137-3150 at starting load so I'm sure it can produce close to 3300-3400fps without much issue. But I'm content at 3200-3300 fps
Regardless, it will be snappy at both ends... definitely not a bench gun.
Nope not at all, but I'm not a benchrest shooter I live to hunt




























