Toughest bullet in 90 to 100 gr size
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'What does "tough" mean to you. The Sierra 100 gr. HP is "tougher" than the TNT, what would that mean?
I am confused. You are talking about "tough" bullets and includinge v-max, tnt, etc. in the mix, none of which are tough at all.Kill a hog. Save the planet.
My videos - https://www.youtube.com/user/HornHillRange
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I'm confused over tough also, but hope it's not like Tough Skin jeans that Sears sold...my mom tried to get me a pair of those once when I was a kid...she took those back quickly and bought me Levi 501s forever after...
Double Naught Spy maybe tougher means deader? Can you get deader than dead? Don't be so shy, the guy is asking about bullets that weigh in the range you like to shoot! So he got his nomenclature wrong, let's help set him straight and shooting a round he's confident in.From my cold dead endmill...
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I’m amazed that ‘tough’ is hard to understand. Let me simplify it for you guys. Tough, in this instance, is measured by how well it holds together in a critter, like a hog. Yes, a Nosler Partition would be considered tough. A V-Max would be considered less tough, and perhaps fragile. A tough bullet would penetrate a hog, and maybe exit. So, starting with a 95 gr V-Max as ‘least tough’, and the Partition and most tough, how tough is the 90 gr Speer? How tough and effective are the Lapua bullets. Given the option, I’d use 100 gr Nosler BTs only, if that were an option. What cup and core bullet gets me close to the BT?
What I want is a 90 to 100 gr bullet for max velocity in the Grendel, and I want the bullet to hold together in a hog. For deer, I use a 260, and don’t plan to change. Only need one bullet per deer. I have used the 95 gr V-Max on a few hogs, and it worked. Lately I’m using the 123 gr SST, and it works fine, though a bit slow. The sweet spot looks to be about 100 gr.
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603 Country You make a great case for using copper monolithic bullets.From my cold dead endmill...
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I have considered the copper monolithic bullets, but don’t have any on hand. And I’m concerned that at Grendel velocities, they may not open sufficiently. And, of course, they are expensive. The nice fellow that sold me the Grendel upper was a fan of the TTSX bullets. They aren’t cheap.
AlI need is for Nosler to make more 100 gr Ballistic Tips, but they probably won’t be cheap either. But, it checks all the boxes for what I want.
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You have repeatedly said toughest and you don't want it coming apart. The obvious choice is ball ammo. If you can find some non-expanding copper rounds in that size, that would be what I would pick first.Kill a hog. Save the planet.
My videos - https://www.youtube.com/user/HornHillRange
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The Cavity Back and Maker monoliths are something to consider. Great expansion and weight retention.NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO
CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor
6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:
www.AR15buildbox.com
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Originally posted by 603Country View PostI have considered the copper monolithic bullets, but don’t have any on hand. And I’m concerned that at Grendel velocities, they may not open sufficiently. And, of course, they are expensive. The nice fellow that sold me the Grendel upper was a fan of the TTSX bullets. They aren’t cheap.
Monos are about as expensive as traditional "toughest" cup and core bullets.
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