x2. Very interested. Still, I wish that Nosler would have done these in 77 grain.
Isn't 77gr a little heavy for the 1 in 9 twist that the majority of 223 rifles are using these days?
Gravity's pull is easily adjusted for. A 70gr @ 2800 fps has 20% less wind deflection than a 55gr @ 3200, at 500 yards. Wind is the tricky part
For target shooting or an animal that gives you time to range, agreed. For a coyote that steps out of a bush for 15 seconds at 400 yards, I’d rather have a flat trajectory and much farther mpbr and hold the 20% extra wind.
For target shooting or an animal that gives you time to range, agreed. For a coyote that steps out of a bush for 15 seconds at 400 yards, I’d rather have a flat trajectory and much farther mpbr and hold the 20% extra wind.
Looks like a nice bullet for wolf/deer!
I'd like it out of a 22-250, but I'm anti-heavy bullet for 223 for coyote and smaller size game anymore. The trajectory is horrible at those speeds. Probably looking at a 60" drop at 500 yards at 2800 fps, if I had to guess. 50gr superformance in 22-250 has less than half the drop and same energy on target.
These would be perfect out of a Middlestead (22-243).
-54” drop isn’t that bad with 75’s
Saying you should have gotten a 257 wby in a conversation about heavy bullets in a .223 is like telling someone they should have gotten a 3500 when they buy a side by side...
This is a interesting comment, that seems to be repeated fairly often. I'm a curious sort, so just compared my 75 grn 223 load to some premium 130 grn 270 loads on BallisticAE. (Picked the 270 because it's so often held up as a flat shooter, though obviously not in the Middlestead category of flatness.)
Both zero'd at 100 meters, the 270 loads have dropped around 56-58" @ 500. My 22" barrelled 223 loaded with 75s... 54.1".
Obviously not a super scientific comparison- and only looking at trajectory, no wind. Still, serves to illustrate that the 223 with heavies doesn't have all that horrible of a trajectory.
Anyone seen any of these in canada yet?




























