What is "slow" velocity for center hunting cartridge?

What is slow velocity for hunting cartridges?


  • Total voters
    98
3000 at the muzzle is my magic number for any cartridge I'm shooting , magnumitis or something I guess.
I pick a bullet that will get me there in that cartridge (taking bc and type into consideration) but I don't like shooting 120's in the 260 so 130's at 2900 it is, so I built a faster 6.5 to launch em at 3150ish.
 
Last edited:
People talk about how the 45-70 is such a short range bear HAMMER. Original was a 405gr about 1200fps. Buffalo Bore is a 405gr at 2000fps or so, right? I could be convinced that anything under 2400fps is slow velocity from a hunting round.
 
I think in a hunting context impact velocity is a lot more of a factor than muzzle velocity. I will presume the OP is referring to impact velocity.

With that in mind, I consider ~1800fps to be slow. Below this threshold few bullets will expand reliably. As a result terminal performance can be poor when using a small bore at low velocity. There are some very slow and effective cartridges, but they tend to push BIG, HEAVY bullets.
 
I view muzzle speed level to be compared to 308/30-06/7mm which I think are high muzzle speed rounds. I consider the 35 Whelen to be a medium muzzle speed round, 250gr at 2400 fps. And the 358 Winchester, 250gr at 2300 fps.
 
All relative depending on what you have in the safe., I really need something to fill the "fast" hole in my safe but I like the med bores and magnum pistol calibers too much for some reason...

I have a 454 casull rifle, pretty "slow" shooting 300's at 1900 fps, pretty slow in my books. For a handgunner that's out of this world fast.
 
Last edited:
I think in a hunting context impact velocity is a lot more of a factor than muzzle velocity. I will presume the OP is referring to impact velocity.

With that in mind, I consider ~1800fps to be slow. Below this threshold few bullets will expand reliably. As a result terminal performance can be poor when using a small bore at low velocity. There are some very slow and effective cartridges, but they tend to push BIG, HEAVY bullets.

I was thinking about impact speed but consider the 223 for example. It's a high muzzle speed round, the bullet starts off at 3000 fps but at 300 meters bullet speed is down to 1800 fps.
 
Back in the day the 30/30 was fast
To me slow is black powder capable so 2000 fps or less
3000 fps is fast as in the great 250/3000 and its marketing back in the
Between 2000-2999 fps is where most non magnums and not fast small bores sit. I'd call them high power mid velocity cartridges. That's how I see I anyway
 
I was thinking about impact speed but consider the 223 for example. It's a high muzzle speed round, the bullet starts off at 3000 fps but at 300 meters bullet speed is down to 1800 fps.

Exactly! Every bullet runs out of gas at some distance. I shoot a lot of critters with my .223 and have a pretty good idea what the threshold for terminal performance is. For me it's about 400m on a good (calm) day.

What might be surprising to some is a heavier bullet leaving the muzzle slower may 'catch' a lighter faster bullet leaving the muzzle at a higher speed. I can shoot a 40gr bullet much faster (3800fps) than a 65gr (3000fps) but the 65gr monolithic retains more speed and energy at 400m. The speed it left my barrel doesn't matter to the coyote, but the impact velocity does.

I wish Emerson had specified MUZZLE velocity in the original post. It would be a lot simpler, and I would not have even replied because IT DOES NOT MATTER! Impact velocity matters!!

Or such is my answer to "What is slow velocity for a centre hunting cartridge".

Maybe I should have been less presumptive and said 'anything that takes more than 1 second to chamber'!
 
Back
Top Bottom