Buttermilk
Well-Known Member
Place some Velcro on the shell deflector. This mill minimize brass damage.
View attachment 186963 A friend of mine just bought some of those locally. Ive never seen those before and thought they might be worth sharing for the blkout hunters looking for super sonic hunt bullets. 0.62cents each for loose bullets btw....
I may try them but im still content with my 194 subs
I've also been handgun hunting for close to 30 years and have killed right at 100 deer with them.I personally have no use for a 300 BO. I have killed plenty of deer with pistols and have learned some lessons. 357 mag revolvers with old school type hollow points 140 to 158 gr should not be stretched much over 50 yards in my experience. A 200 gr 45 cal. cast SWC running 1000 fps from a 45 ACP 50 yards and under does OK. Both through the chest act like a arrow shot deer. If you stretch the yardage you loose too much velocity and usually don't get an exit and blood trails are about non existent. What I am getting at is with what ever platform you choose to use you have to know it's limitation and YOUR limitation and not exceed that or bad things happen.
As to the 125 Nosler BT it is a GREAT bullet if you keep the impact velocity up to around 1800 fps. I use it in all my 30 cal weapons for deer. Keep the impact velocity under 3000 fps and above 1800 fps and it is a deer killer. Usually below 2800 fps it will go through both shoulders of a deer with exit. I have shot at least 25 deer with my 14" barrel 30-30AI T/C Contender pistol from almost point blank to 150 yards or so and have never recovered a bullet. Muzzle velocity is 2670 FPS. I mostly shoot through the shoulders and I have never had a deer go over about 5 yards with 99% dropping in their tracks.
For me If I knew that I might have a shot out to 150 yards I sure would be using something that I had complete confidence in that would do the job with no questions in my hands.
If you follow Johnny's Reloading Bench you may have seen his video series on loading .300 Blackout for accuracy and hunting. This video shows the results of his reloading .300 BO 194gr Lehigh Defense Subsonic rounds and shooting them into Ballistic Gel at 100yds using an 8.5" barrel AR Pistol
johhnys reloading bench 194gr - Search Videos
www.bing.com
The retained energy on the 194 me is enough to open it up well beyond 150. I wouldn't try it with other bullets though. The hornady subx is another that meets FBI requirements for expansion and penetration. These companys that have designed specific bullets that open a low velocities have done a good job. Theyre worth the extra $ and the varmint bullets should be used for plinking and varmints.I personally have no use for a 300 BO. I have killed plenty of deer with pistols and have learned some lessons. 357 mag revolvers with old school type hollow points 140 to 158 gr should not be stretched much over 50 yards in my experience. A 200 gr 45 cal. cast SWC running 1000 fps from a 45 ACP 50 yards and under does OK. Both through the chest act like a arrow shot deer. If you stretch the yardage you loose too much velocity and usually don't get an exit and blood trails are about non existent. What I am getting at is with what ever platform you choose to use you have to know it's limitation and YOUR limitation and not exceed that or bad things happen.
As to the 125 Nosler BT it is a GREAT bullet if you keep the impact velocity up to around 1800 fps. I use it in all my 30 cal weapons for deer. Keep the impact velocity under 3000 fps and above 1800 fps and it is a deer killer. Usually below 2800 fps it will go through both shoulders of a deer with exit. I have shot at least 25 deer with my 14" barrel 30-30AI T/C Contender pistol from almost point blank to 150 yards or so and have never recovered a bullet. Muzzle velocity is 2670 FPS. I mostly shoot through the shoulders and I have never had a deer go over about 5 yards with 99% dropping in their tracks.
For me If I knew that I might have a shot out to 150 yards I sure would be using something that I had complete confidence in that would do the job with no questions in my hands.
My grendal did that. (Short barreled) i went to a H buffer and it solved the timing problem.View attachment 192721
So I finally got a chance to shoot it and thus is what my brass looks like. The brass deflector looks a little banged up so it seems to me like it's overgassed or something. Any observations y'all have on this? Also, can I reload it if it bangs em up like that?