Hornady 204 Ruger 45 gr SP........

pickeringchris

Regular
Rating - 100%
14   0   0
For those of you wondering about these heavy bullets in a 1:12 twist, I had a chance to fire off a box at the range today in my Tikka Varmint. FYI, I am a new shooter and not the best shot but I had 5 shot groups under 1 moa. Better than I have done so far with 32, 34 and 40 grain. Many people talk about the heavier bullets not doing well with this twist but I will respectfully disagree. I believe the 45 grain soft point is slightly shorter than the 40 grain V-max. This is likely why they did well with this twist.
I was getting about 3400 FPS vs 4200-4400 with the Hornady 32 grain v max.

I have one box left and looking to buy more. Problem is, I cant remember where I got them. lol I remember them being hard to find.
 
Last edited:
It wasnt my chrono. first round of the day: 32 vmax @ 4440....... Most others were 4200+/- 50.
Maybe you need to clean your bore ;-)

I edited my post. It was 32 grain v-max I was shooting along with the 45 grain sp's

I would say the chrono your using is off. 4440 is way to fast. You sure you werent shooting the 24gr hornady load?
 
Any who.

Yeah I like shooting the "heavier" bullets in my 204 as well.

I shoot a Sierra 39gr Blitzkings in my 1 in 12" barrel and they work very well.
 
Many people talk about the heavier bullets not doing well with this twist but I will respectfully disagree. I believe the 45 grain soft point is slightly shorter than the 40 grain V-max. This is likely why they did well with this twist.

You don't have to disagree. Its a generalization that still rings true in most cases. You've already hit upon why the 45 gr Hornady SP will sometimes shoot in a 1 in 12 twist rifle while others have trouble with the 40 gr Vmax.

Just about any .204 rifle will shoot the 39 gr Sierra Blitz King very well. So the 40-45 gr range is generally the cut off point for the typical 1 in 12 factory twist (again, depending on projectile length).

My factory 1 in 12 twist Remington 700 had no trouble with either of them, but now that its been rebarreled with a 1 in 10 Pac-Nor Super Match, it eats everything up to 50 gr Berger. Haven't tried anything heavier (or longer) than that.
 
You don't have to disagree. Its a generalization that still rings true in most cases. You've already hit upon why the 45 gr Hornady SP will sometimes shoot in a 1 in 12 twist rifle while others have trouble with the 40 gr Vmax.

Just about any .204 rifle will shoot the 39 gr Sierra Blitz King very well. So the 40-45 gr range is generally the cut off point for the typical 1 in 12 factory twist (again, depending on projectile length).

My factory 1 in 12 twist Remington 700 had no trouble with either of them, but now that its been rebarreled with a 1 in 10 Pac-Nor Super Match, it eats everything up to 50 gr Berger. Haven't tried anything heavier (or longer) than that.

How many rounds did you have threw your barrel before it was shot out? I was thinking about rebarreling to 20BR.
 
How many rounds did you have threw your barrel before it was shot out? I was thinking about rebarreling to 20BR.

I didn't put that many rounds through it, actually. Less than 1,000. I became interested in the faster twist because I wanted to shoot the heavier bullets (40+ gr) and personally I think the factory twist barrels would be better served if they were 1 in 10 or 1 in 11.
 
Back
Top Bottom