The pointed bullets should make quite a difference. In the era of 30 years ago, a type of rifle competition called the riflemans rodeo, was big time in Alberta and BC. Great inter-provincial contests!hannibal said:I would like to dust off the ol' dirty thirty and hunt with it. Has anybody tried the new hornady leverevolution ammo and does it make a difference?
H4831 said:The pointed bullets should make quite a difference. In the era of 30 years ago, a type of rifle competition called the riflemans rodeo, was big time in Alberta and BC. Great inter-provincial contests!
It was animal shaped targets with ringed scoring lines on the chest areas. The targets ranged from 100 to 300 yards, a deer and antelope were on running tracks at 100 and 150. A bear came up at 200, a sheep at 250 and a goat at 300. You layed prone, if you wanted to, with five cartridges and when a cartridge was chambered, the range operators called for a target and the shooter didn't know what targe was coming, either a running target or a pop up. The three pop up targets appeared for four seconds. You were allowed one shot at each target.
One rifle class in the event was called "Frontier," class, which was lever action rifles with calibres developed prior to 1900. This meant most rifles were 30-30. I loaded 150 grain pointed bullets in my old 94 with a Williams Fool Proof peep sight, and fed them one at a time. Some shooters cried foul, but there was no rule against it.
I came second at least twice and first one year, as the picture shows. There was a shooter from Kamloops who was mighty good with a Winchester 94 and he was the one who came first the twice I came second. Then I had my glory and beat him! Can't remember his name, I wonder if he is on this blog?
Calgary shooters took home a lot of trophies with scope sighted, "any rifle," rule, but were quite beatable with iron sights.
http://i133.photobucket.com/albums/q65/H4831/P1020421.jpg
At least thay are not overly expensive. $20/box compared to $12-$20 for plain jane 30-30John Y Cannuck said:Offering a counterpoint,
I'm sorry, I think the cartridge does just fine on it's own. The leverrevolution, is largely marketting hype.
Try them? yes I will. But I don't expect miracles.
Foxer said:I think the bullet is more of a 'breakthru' than the 'light mag' load. Obviously it's going to retain more speed and energy downrange, and is a nice 'compromise' between 150 grain and 170 grain bullets.
But the big question - how does it do on animals?
With more than a hundred years of perfecting the original bullet designs, the new bullet will not have to prove it's better, for me, it will have to prove that it's EQUAL.But the big question - how does it do on animals?
I've always been affraid to see what happens to that soft tip, after it's been exposed to -35 for several days, or after it gets old.
pharaoh2 said:I've always been affraid to see what happens to that soft tip, after it's been exposed to -35 for several days, or after it gets old.
That reputation is the only reason I'll try these. I'd be quicker to try them if they were available to handloaders, but my response from Hornady was "never.....maybe" so, I guess it's not in the works for the forseeable future.Foxer said:Hornady does make good stuff as a rule - usually does what they say it'll do.




























