My neighbour & I have our own range. We used to shoot a lot of bullets thru the summer. Then one of his camp cronys told him of the virtues of premium bullets one time when one of his deer got away after being shot. Shortly thereafter he started shooting premium$$ bullets out of his deer guns, you could watch him wince as those half dollar bullets impacted the targets. Now he doesn't shoot at the range at all. Do the premium bullets kill better when you have no practice!! I think not. Rem Corelocs in bulk bags have always worked for deer & moose for me & I don't mind killing a few targets with them either![]()
A cheapskate buddy moved up to a .270 after shooting a .308, used federal hunter specials for years, claims they were blowing up on fairly thin branches. Uses Federal premium now and no probs. In my old 06 180gr Interbonds just seemed a little more accurate than anything else and were a great price for a bonded bullet so why not?
A cheapskate buddy moved up to a .270 after shooting a .308
and back to bullet selection, Nosler makes 2 types of Balistic Tips, one for varmit and one for deer, don't try using the lighter varmit on deer.
The 50grn .224 bullets I'n loading for my 22-250 have a very thin jacket while the 115grn .257 for the 25-06 are for deer sized game and have a much heavier jacket, and hold together well enough to shoot through both sholders, lungs heart and exit the far side. The light weight ones won't
Wadda ya mean "moved up"? I consider that a lateral move!![]()
). He used the cheap Federal .308s for years and was very successful, but thought the added velocity and possibly lighter construction of the .270 bullet was causing grief. Maybe as was mentioned by .303carbine he just hasn't hit a branch yet. For the record, this will be his third season on the same box of bullets and he always fills his tags.Yeah, but the problem with the BTs is that some have heavy jackets and some don't, and it's not easy to tell which are which
NBT caliber 20 through 25 cal have varmint style jackets (55,70, 80 gr 243" & 85 gr .257")
from 24 cal through 30 they are designed for deer sized game (90,95 gr 243" & 100,115 .257")
Nosler used to make NBT in 8mm through 375 that were designed for larger game like elk etc, but they're being phased out in favor of the Accubond. IIRC only the 8mm 180 grain Ballistic Tip remains and for how long who knows





























