The two bullets to consider is the Nosler Partition (either 95 or 100 grains) and the Barnes. The Barnes in their 85 grain version is close to the length of the 95 Nosler and the 100 grain Barnes might be too long to stabilize properly.
These two bullets were recovered from a moose and a deer. The soft frontal lead of the Nosler opens up reliably and the rear has the mass to carry through.

The 270 Barnes on the left from a deer and the 338 on the right from a moose. Both show the large frontal diameter and lots of carry on the back.
Using bullets designed for varmints like the 85 grain Sierra HPBT may work for some but when recommending them as in some previous posts might not be the best choice. Sierra does not recommend their Match Kings for hunting but that does not mean someone has continued to try.
The Barnes bullets used in 260 Remington and 280 Remington have yet to fail but none have been recovered in the modern versions. The Barnes in the picture was recovered and a 130 grain 270 weighted 129.5 once the "DNA" was removed.
These two bullets were recovered from a moose and a deer. The soft frontal lead of the Nosler opens up reliably and the rear has the mass to carry through.

The 270 Barnes on the left from a deer and the 338 on the right from a moose. Both show the large frontal diameter and lots of carry on the back.
Using bullets designed for varmints like the 85 grain Sierra HPBT may work for some but when recommending them as in some previous posts might not be the best choice. Sierra does not recommend their Match Kings for hunting but that does not mean someone has continued to try.
The Barnes bullets used in 260 Remington and 280 Remington have yet to fail but none have been recovered in the modern versions. The Barnes in the picture was recovered and a 130 grain 270 weighted 129.5 once the "DNA" was removed.
Last edited:




















































