ACKLEY ABE said:
Premium bullets seem to be the rage now, but I'm not sure what, in fact determines a "Premium Bullet", except the price.
It seems to me that a lot of guys today are obsessed with light rifles, high velocity, small calibers, 6mms, 7mms, range finders etc...
No doubt if that's your thing, then bullets such as
Barnes TSX would probably be great, but conventional bullets and high velocity might not work so good at high impact velocities.
I learned that when I shot a pretty nice cinnamon bear a few years ago with hopped up
400gr Speers from my .45-70. Those bullets were avg 1900fps MV and I hit the bear at close range. Those Speers grenaded! But that was my fault for not realizing the type of velocity they are designed for.
I imagine if I had fired those same 400gr Speers at a muzzle velocity somewhere between 1400-1600fps they probably would have been okay.
I considered those bullets to have failed. Even though they killed the bear I could not retrieve anything from those bullets. They had turned inside out and there was nothing but fragments of jacket material and bits of lead left.
If on the other hand you shoot larger calibers and heavier bullets, which is what I tend to do, then you find that conventional cup and core bullets like
Remington Cor-Lokts,
Hornady Interlocks work just fine.
My idea of a perfect deer cartridge/bullet is a .30-06 loaded with 165gr
Hornady BTSP IL. The last couple of bucks have been shot with a
200gr Nosler Accubond from my .300H&H, and let me tell ya' that bullet pancakes the bucks!
For moose and bear I like something bigger; .338WM with
225gr Nosler Partitions are great (so is the 250gr, but there's not much difference in terminal performance from my experience). I suppose I've shot a dozen bull moose with the 225gr Nosler-Part.
I'm thinking about taking the .300H&H bear hunting once I get a fiberglas stock put on it, so I can bounce it around a bit. I will probably load it with a 200gr Nosler Partition.
To me a huge consideration is the price. The best buy on the market today, IMHO is the
Nosler Accubond. Great performance and pretty damn well priced and next would be the
Hornady Interlock, and the
Nosler Partition remains the standard of comparison for all hunting bullets IMHO.
By comparison, Barnes TSX is about twice as expensive as the Noslers and 4 times as expensive as the Hornadys.
Bottomline for me is I have no need for the so-called premiums, since I shoot heavy caliber and bullets, sorta
Elmer Keith school of thought.