I did a head to head test of a few bullets today, fired from my 300WSM into dry paper at 30 yards.
Before we get people lining up to tell me the test wasn't scientific, doesn't properly simulate animal flesh, isn't done at various distances etc etc.....
...I'll tell you it isn't scientific. I only shot one bullet of each type. And it doesn't simulate animal flesh, nor is it designed to. And I dont' care what it will do at different distances, since I know it will open as far as I can shoot. So, if you want to use wet paper, bullet tubes, gelatin-whatever- and you want to spend days loading to different velocities, trying numerous combinations to get some hard scientific data, please do. (And if you are willing to pay me to do it, I'l do it for you.
) So save the "what you need to do is this" speech,as I was just having a bit of fun this afternoon...

What I want to do is compare one bullet of known value to an unknown. I already know what a 180gr TSX, a 180gr Nosler Partition and a 180gr Hornady does when fired at game, so I wanted to see how a bullet much smaller holds up. (I also had some 180gr Failsafe factory ammo from several years ago and tried that too, but I don't think I ever shot an animal with a 180gr FS)
Dry paper really stresses a bullet, it's harder than wet paper and will tear weaker bullets apart. Specifically, I wanted to see what the 130gr TTSX does when it's stressed to the max!!
We had:
130gr Tipped Tripe Shock X bullet @ 3525 fps
180gr TSX @ 2970 fps
180 gr Partition @ 2950 fps
180 gr Hornady @ 2825 FPS
180 gr Fail Safe @ 2987FPS
Here is about an inch in.
CLockwise form top right at 130 TTSX, 180 NP, 180 TSX, 180 HI, 180 FS.
All the bullets have started to open up a bit but are far from full expansion. The Fail Safe leaves the smallest wound channel.
Here we are about half way through the bullets journey. They are all expanded, and the 130gr TTSX is actually making the biggest wound channel, and the FS the smallest, although it 's a bit hard to see from the photo.
This is just before the end. All bullets have expanded as much as they are ever going to, the NP has lost it's front half, and the Hornady is mangled wreckage. The Hornady penetrates this newspaper and goes no further, stopping at the next layer.
Before we get people lining up to tell me the test wasn't scientific, doesn't properly simulate animal flesh, isn't done at various distances etc etc.....
...I'll tell you it isn't scientific. I only shot one bullet of each type. And it doesn't simulate animal flesh, nor is it designed to. And I dont' care what it will do at different distances, since I know it will open as far as I can shoot. So, if you want to use wet paper, bullet tubes, gelatin-whatever- and you want to spend days loading to different velocities, trying numerous combinations to get some hard scientific data, please do. (And if you are willing to pay me to do it, I'l do it for you.
What I want to do is compare one bullet of known value to an unknown. I already know what a 180gr TSX, a 180gr Nosler Partition and a 180gr Hornady does when fired at game, so I wanted to see how a bullet much smaller holds up. (I also had some 180gr Failsafe factory ammo from several years ago and tried that too, but I don't think I ever shot an animal with a 180gr FS)
Dry paper really stresses a bullet, it's harder than wet paper and will tear weaker bullets apart. Specifically, I wanted to see what the 130gr TTSX does when it's stressed to the max!!
We had:
130gr Tipped Tripe Shock X bullet @ 3525 fps
180gr TSX @ 2970 fps
180 gr Partition @ 2950 fps
180 gr Hornady @ 2825 FPS
180 gr Fail Safe @ 2987FPS
Here is about an inch in.
CLockwise form top right at 130 TTSX, 180 NP, 180 TSX, 180 HI, 180 FS.
All the bullets have started to open up a bit but are far from full expansion. The Fail Safe leaves the smallest wound channel.
Here we are about half way through the bullets journey. They are all expanded, and the 130gr TTSX is actually making the biggest wound channel, and the FS the smallest, although it 's a bit hard to see from the photo.
This is just before the end. All bullets have expanded as much as they are ever going to, the NP has lost it's front half, and the Hornady is mangled wreckage. The Hornady penetrates this newspaper and goes no further, stopping at the next layer.
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