If you are shooting PRS, 77gr is max weight to stay in tactical. 223 is at a disadvantage in open, even with heavy bullets.
That's what the Parrots will say, cause they just repeat what they hear.
You can use a 223 in open division if you want to. Just don't run 88s registered as a tactical shooter or you will get DQ'd.
If you do the ballistic math on a 223 properly configured for heavies and are realistic about what you actually hit, you will find the 223 is every bit good enough for open class for anyone would does not seriously expect to be in the top 10 in a major match.
95 percent of points dropped are not due to the caliber at all... it's position, incorrect scope dope, wind estimation, time utilization etc... not the caliber.
Specific misinformation surrounds the 223 with heavy bullets that is propagated by guys with too short of a throat and therefore lack the case volume needed to hit the speeds required to establish adequate ballistic stability with the 88s, then they complain about long range accuracy degradation as though its the last word on 223.
So a bad rap for ballistic performance with a 223 is mostly generated by guys who don't have a rifle properly configured for the 88-95 grain bullets, or are using bullets in the G1 0.4XX BC range.
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