- Location
- Prince Albert, Sk
What if bismuth was used instead of lead, it is heavy, but non-toxic? Say make a Nosler Partition type bullet with copper jacket and bismuth cores. WK
Might up the price but worth a look.
What if bismuth was used instead of lead, it is heavy, but non-toxic? Say make a Nosler Partition type bullet with copper jacket and bismuth cores. WK
What if bismuth was used instead of lead, it is heavy, but non-toxic? Say make a Nosler Partition type bullet with copper jacket and bismuth cores. WK
Regardless the reaction of either deer the bullet didn't do what it is touted to do best..
That would be a rifling issue!
I,m not slagging Barnes just because..
I still load 150-grain TSX FN for the 30-30 and 30 Remington, excellent results on over a dozen animals, and I will continue to use with full confidence.. The TTSX on the other hand has about a 30% fail rate with my small sampling, not worth the gamble IMO.
I also have loaded a few hundred Barnes 406 dia rd nose bullets for my 401WSL, I still have a few hundred waiting for brass..
Maybe it could tumble after impact with brush in front of the animal?
Do you have photos of these bullets?
Gun writer John Barness who regularly posts on 24hr campfire has posted before on a Barnes thread. He has shot, witness shot, been part of hunting parties all over the world where thousands of animals were shots and he said he’s only seen a handful of of TSX failures. If I recall correctly, they were all with smaller calibers (under .270 I think?) and all were X and TSX versions. Had never seen a TTSX fail. A single person who’s experiencing a 30% failure rate is a bit strange. I’ll see if I can dig up that post.
Regardless the reaction of either deer the bullet didn't do what it is touted to do best..
That would be a rifling issue!
I,m not slagging Barnes just because..
I still load 150-grain TSX FN for the 30-30 and 30 Remington, excellent results on over a dozen animals, and I will continue to use with full confidence.. The TTSX on the other hand has about a 30% fail rate with my small sampling, not worth the gamble IMO.
I also have loaded a few hundred Barnes 406 dia rd nose bullets for my 401WSL, I still have a few hundred waiting for brass..
Sure, we all want magazine ad perfect expansion with 4 petals pulled back. But it would be interesting to know the reaction of the deer and what the internal damage looked like.
Gun writer John Barness who regularly posts on 24hr campfire has posted before on a Barnes thread. He has shot, witness shot, been part of hunting parties all over the world where thousands of animals were shots and he said he’s only seen a handful of of TSX failures. If I recall correctly, they were all with smaller calibers (under .270 I think?) and all were X and TSX versions. Had never seen a TTSX fail. A single person who’s experiencing a 30% failure rate is a bit strange. I’ll see if I can dig up that post.
The deer that had bullet in backbone dropped on spot. Deer with bullet under hide in back ham bolted a fair piece, finished laying down.. Wound channel very narrow with not much damage on both..
You may be inclined to look at Accubonds or Swift Scirocco's , I feel those may give you the balance of what you are looking for.A lot less lead in the the Swift offerings also and I lean towards using the Swift line.I believe the A Frame is bonded to the jacket as well.
Partition vs A Frame...
Accubonds vs Scirooco...
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Ask him about the records he kept on some African cull hunts to document distance travelled by game with various bullets. He will tell you that Bergers are the fastest killing bullets he’s ever used, and that the monos were all basically tied for the longest blood trails of the bunch. Everything in between was; not surprisingly, somewhere in between. One comment that I particularily liked was that people who thought a TSX made a big wound channel had never used a Berger. He’s an unabashed Partition guy, and not shy to say that some decidedly ordinary cup and core factory loads are a heck of a lot better than its fashionable to say.
I know this comment was from the first page, but I'll be dammed, your post singlehandedly made me a fan of Swift!!
I need to get my hands on some of those and try them out!