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3/13/2011 12:54:51 PM EDT
TTSX boattail Bullets??  I am loading some up to try and they are very long compared to my Hornady hollow point boattails.  Both are 168 grn.  COL on the Hornady is 2.810  But I can set the Barnes at 3.020 and they chamber very well.  They are tight at 3.025 . I painted the bullets with a marker and chambered them in a dummy case to check when they would just touch the grooves, then backed the depth off.005
3/13/2011 7:07:41 PM EDT
[#1]
I haven't loaded any Barnes bullets.

But if I did, I would invest in a Barnes reloading manual first, and use their loads and procedures.

You have already discovered that their bullets are different, so use the correct loading data for no problems.
3/13/2011 7:18:16 PM EDT
[#2]
I'm using the exact same bullets in .308 for reloading.  I have been seating them to 2.780, as from what I've been reading they like a "jump" before hitting the lands.

I just took a deer with one yesterday, with amazing results.  She bucked up on her hind legs (she was on the move) and jumped a few times, and landed about 10 or 15 feet away.  Front legs never touched the ground before she landed.
When I got down from the tree and walked over she was laying there in a pool of blood with about a 3" hole in her chest.

They are long bullets, but they do their job very effectively.  to get 168gr out of a pure copper bullet, it has to be longer than anything with lead or heavier alloys.

Ive read about people taking elk easily with this bullet from a .308.  I'm still working up loads to find the most accurate charge of powder.  Currently using IMR 4064 in BH cases.
3/13/2011 8:31:44 PM EDT
[#3]
I've used the 180gr ttsx bullets in 30-06 and .300 win mag to take several elk. I've also used the 140gr in my 7mm-08 to take one elk. I used AA 2700 and IMR 4064 for 30-06 If I remember right.
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