Yes, CIL made some very good bullets. I'm guessing on dates made, but the old faithful Dominion ammunition that enabled so many families living in the boondocks in the great depression of the 1930s to have fresh meat to eat, should go into history as a great Canadian artifact.
The round nose bullets with a lot of lead exposed looked like the KKSP, but I don't know if they called them that or not, in their loaded ammunition.
I think the Copper Point Expanding came out shortly after WW2. I have said on these threads various times that I think the CPE were even better than the Nosler partition, which also came out within a fairly short time after WW2, but the Nosler, being produced in the country it was, became the premium bullet that other bullets were judged by.
My opinion on CPE bullets was reinforced after I read Jack Boudreau's books on hunting grizzly bears. He shot a lot of Grizzly bear, all with a 30-06, and all with CIL Copper Point Expanding bullets, claiming there were none better.
But, like so many products, apparently they cost too much to produce, so they switched to the Sabre Point, which were supposed to be similar, but were usually considered far inferior to the CPE.
In the nice, green bullet boxes, it can be seen that foam was used on top of the shorter bullets, but the longer, like CPE, didn't require foam!
