Privy Partizan Bullets - Terminal Ballistics?

Riflechair

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 99.7%
369   1   2
Location
BC
Hello folks
There seems to have been a surge of Privy Partizan bullet products on the market right now. I have to admit I've purchased large volumes of these bullets without doing much research on terminal ballistic expectations on wild game or the neighbours dogs (joke). I've never been brand specific to any particular degree, especially to premium bullets. I use a calibre and bullet weight appropriate to the required task. The Privi bullets interest me however they are an unknown quantity shrouded in mystery; at least to me they are. I haven't taken any game with them - yet. My baseline hunting bullet has been conventional Hornady products for the last 20 years but I'm open to alternatives if more affordable. Having said that I don't want to sacrifice terminal performance to save a few pennies. I have had bad experiences with Speer and I will never run their bullets again unless I'm only shooting at paper.

The 165gr SPBT Privi bullets I've been running out of my 308's seem to fly accurately enough but what about terminal performance?

Any experienced opinions out there?
My very brief experience with Privy Partizan factory ammunition was with 196gr SP 8X57JS and I found that it barked out of my military mauser with authority. I've had similar experiences with Sellier and Bellot factory ammunition. However those were range days shooting at paper, not wild game (or the neighbour's dogs). Privy Partizan seems to be a company held in high regard with a proud history however I don't know of any authority in North America that can vouch for these bullets. The Eurpoean web sites all seem to be in Slavic or Germanic languages which precludes me from educating myself! :( :(

There is one thread related to this subject HERE but there is no specific recommendation FOR or AGAINST privy bullets. You guys are the Canadian authority in my opinion.

Cheerio folks and thanks
Richard

SP_bullet_r.jpg

Soft Point (SP) bullets are standard bullets designed to provide valuable and controlled expansion when penetrating. This is accomplished by the soft lead exposed in the nose, which initiates expansion and by the progressively tapered jacket in its ogival part, which provides uniform mushrooming and good penetration.

PSP_bullet_r.jpg

Pointed Soft Point (PSP) bullets have sharp lead nose, which cause the bullets expansion when hitting and aerodynamically shaped ogival part which provide better ballistic coefficient and maximum striking energy at longer ranges.

SPBT_bullet_r.jpg

Soft Point Boat Tail (SPBT) and Pointed Soft Point Boat Tail (PSP BT) bullets have specially shaped back part of a reduced diameter, which lowers the air drag. The better ballistic coefficient of these bullets, primary PSP BT bullet, provides successful firing at longer distances, at which the bullet keeps higher striking energy with reduced drift and flatter trajectory.

SPRN_bullet_r.jpg

Soft Point Round Nose (SPRN) bullets have a blunt rounded nose and they are suitable for short range shooting, especially in bushes (or in woods). Thanks to the large lead weight exposed in the nose, the bullet mushrooms reliably even at smaller velocities assures high-energy impact. The SPRN bullets have larger bullet weight for a certain length.
 
Last edited:
They perform as good as any SP bullets. Keep them at their designed velocity range and they'll work as good as any other. They always did for me though. I used (use) them in 6.5X55, 8X57, 9.3X57 and 9.3X62 and 30-06/.308 Win.

Their site is in english, too.... http://www.prvipartizan.com/
 
Don't get me wrong guys, I know the ammo can shoot well. This thread is about terminal ballistics. That is, what happens to the bullet after it hits the target (deer, moose or the neighbour's dogs). I'm curious about your experiences with weight retention, wound channels, fragmentation, jacket separation and so-on. Do these Privy bullets explode on impact or hold together quite well?

THANKS!
 
Last edited:
Well, the deer that I have shot with PRVI and 7.62x39 have all been pass throughs with very respectable wound channels. Complete penetration is the norm and with one deer I shot through both shoulders and exited. Very good performance. The bullets have been the most accurate in my rifle too.
 
I have no hunting experiance with .308 bullets, but I do with the .224 55gr sp bullets.

They shot pretty well out to 300y, I was getting 2.5" groups with them at that range. I didn't test them further out than that. I have 8 - 1 shot kills on coyotes and 100 ish dead gophers. All were exactly what I would expect when shooting small game with a .223. I didn't recover any bullets, but I saw some pretty devestating performance at different ranges. All 8 coyotes were at a full run and all of them did a full tumble and stopped DRT.

All in all I think they are a pretty decent bullet....... You definatly can't beat them for the price!

Cheers!
 
I just bought some 286 grain 9.3 mm for mt 9.3x62 cant wait to try them, but still wondering about performance on game
 
Well why don't you do some experiments and see how they perform? Get some wet newsprint stacked (up at least 20 inches) and shoot it at 100 yards. Dry phone books are very hard on bullets and will tell you a lot about how well a bullet hangs together when stressed. I use 2 inches of dry followed by wet.

Fill some milk jugs with water and shoot them at 100 yards. If you line up 3 or 4 and your bullet goes through them all, what more do you need to know?
 
Well I dont' think you want to use those bullets in your 7mm RUM !!! I would treat them the same as a Hornady Interlock.

I havent reloaded those bullets yet but My experience with the ammo in 223 is that it was loaded hotter then winchester. It was a hot day so maybe it was just the powder they used was more Temp sensitive.

I believe I clocked the 55's around 3400 fps !!! and had a blown primer over 30 rounds.

Sub Moa at 100 yards and they were cheap like borsht so I wasnt' complaining.
 
On my hunt last May in Namibia, I used a loaner in 7 X 64 Brenneke. The only ammo we were able to purchase for it was the Privi. The bullet structure appeared to be something like a partition copy. I was extremely disappointed in the bullet performance. Very limited penetration (no exit wounds even at point blank finishing shots) and bullet disintegration on spine shots. In addition, on the loaded ammo, several of the bullets in one box could be easily pushed or pulled with minmal finger pressure which indicates to me a company with less than satisfactory QC. These would be the last bullets I ever used for hunting!
 
Guys

The Europeans have been shooting boar, red deer, roe deer and everything else with Prvi ammo for decades. Any I shot over their with Prvi in 30-06 and 308, the bullets did a fine job. So did the 9.3x62 and 74, though they are a lot heavier bullets.
 
As I said before, they performed as good as any other SP bullets in standard calibers. I'll try to find some recovered from one of my 9.3X57 (I never recovered ANY 9.3 bullets in games when fired from any of my X62).
 
Back
Top Bottom