Spotter's Signature
Active Member
Greetings,
I thought about posting this for a while. The reason is, I had difficulty finding detailed data on 7mm WBY MAG, for loads I was interested in. Maybe this post will help somebody in their load development, or research on hunting cartridge performance. This will compliment what was written here in different posts, regarding the 7mm 150 gr TTSX.
I decided to 100% switch to copper bullets this season, to give them a try for the first time. I picked the 150 gr TTSX for my Mark V. Reasons: good BC (for copper), I can shoot it fast, great terminal performance and precision/accuracy, variety of distances covered, and what others said - load development is easy.
To add to what was posted here a while back on velocities required to open those projectiles, I called Barnes - their technician said that the 7mm 150 gr TTSX projectile opens at 1500 fps to expand to 1.5 x diameter, and it needs 1700 fps to open fully as designed, to 2 x the diameter. These are fantastic numbers, if they work in reality. I need your input on it; there's so much arguing about these bullets!
Here's the load (my max!) - FOLLOW OFFICIAL MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTIONS AND WORK CAUTIOUSLY UP TO YOUR PRECISION LOAD!
Weatherby Mark V 1:10"
24" (cut) pencil barrel with Gen 3 Micro Bastard
150 gr TTSX
Peterson Brass
CCI 250
78.4 gr Ramshot Magnum
BTO: 2.705"
M.V. 3192 fps
First 4 shots: 0.300 MOA, including the 5th (hot skinny barrel "walks"): 0.779 MOA. I just noticed a typo - 78.4 gr NOT 77.4 gr of powder.
Harvest report:
1st day of the rifle season - great 8 point WT buck, angled heart shot (quartering away), ~75 yds. He went ~50 yds before collapsing.
Golf ball size exit:
Doe #1: 115 yds, struck by a lightning. First time I saw this kind of blowback at the entry wound. Pass through; small exit. 100% as advertised.
I found the bullet some 5 yds away after looking; this part is also interesting to me. It dug into the ground about 7" after passing through the doe. 90% weight retention.
Doe #2: 230 yds. Walked ~15 yds before collapsing. Broadside heart shot.
Golf ball size exit:
Now, the other part...
Doe #3: 253 yds. Slightly quartering away, lung shot. She pivoted after the hit and collapsed, all in less than a second. I found the entry wound after looking for it. No exit. Outside, she looked undamaged. Inside, probably everything was destroyed. But now - if she ran and I were to track her, I would likely not find her. Impact velocity: 2654 fps.
That's all I saw; not a droplet of blood:
So, why all this on a long range forum? I was testing these bullets to build up confidence in them BEFORE I go on some long range hunt of a lifetime. Hunting with ammo that you have no FULL confidence in ruins any hunting experience.
When designing this load I had an 800 yds elk load in mind. I did my part, here are the ballistics of the finished ammo.
So, on paper this works comfortably to 700 yds and I'd take game with full conviction within 500 yards with these bullets. However, after that last doe my conviction got a bit eroded; this was at 253 yds!
I'm a long range shooter, my equipment works very well, it's just the terminal ballistics at a distance (well within the "expansion velocity"!) that now occupy my mind. My Mark V cannot take long bullets, and the jump is Weatherby-huge, which limits my options (secant ogives), but that is not really a problem.
So much has been already written about it; so much of it is splitting hairs... TSX vs TTSX vs LRX vs Hammers vs CX vs E-Tips and a number of others that people swear by... How to find confidence in any of this?
I have one more tag this season, for a buck. If I harvest another I'll report more on how these bullets work for me, if I find anything interesting. I want to sort it all out soon, and then make decisions whether to stick with these as a universal load for 0-700 yds, or go back to lead/copper bullets. Interbonds, Accubonds, Partitions, ELD-X (surprising) all work well. ABLRs work OK.
Wow, this post got long. I hope somebody will find it useful. Thank you all for sharing your knowledge.
Merry Christmas to all of you! Stay safe and happy hunting.
SS
I thought about posting this for a while. The reason is, I had difficulty finding detailed data on 7mm WBY MAG, for loads I was interested in. Maybe this post will help somebody in their load development, or research on hunting cartridge performance. This will compliment what was written here in different posts, regarding the 7mm 150 gr TTSX.
I decided to 100% switch to copper bullets this season, to give them a try for the first time. I picked the 150 gr TTSX for my Mark V. Reasons: good BC (for copper), I can shoot it fast, great terminal performance and precision/accuracy, variety of distances covered, and what others said - load development is easy.
To add to what was posted here a while back on velocities required to open those projectiles, I called Barnes - their technician said that the 7mm 150 gr TTSX projectile opens at 1500 fps to expand to 1.5 x diameter, and it needs 1700 fps to open fully as designed, to 2 x the diameter. These are fantastic numbers, if they work in reality. I need your input on it; there's so much arguing about these bullets!
Here's the load (my max!) - FOLLOW OFFICIAL MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTIONS AND WORK CAUTIOUSLY UP TO YOUR PRECISION LOAD!
Weatherby Mark V 1:10"
24" (cut) pencil barrel with Gen 3 Micro Bastard
150 gr TTSX
Peterson Brass
CCI 250
78.4 gr Ramshot Magnum
BTO: 2.705"
M.V. 3192 fps
First 4 shots: 0.300 MOA, including the 5th (hot skinny barrel "walks"): 0.779 MOA. I just noticed a typo - 78.4 gr NOT 77.4 gr of powder.
Harvest report:
1st day of the rifle season - great 8 point WT buck, angled heart shot (quartering away), ~75 yds. He went ~50 yds before collapsing.
Golf ball size exit:
Doe #1: 115 yds, struck by a lightning. First time I saw this kind of blowback at the entry wound. Pass through; small exit. 100% as advertised.
I found the bullet some 5 yds away after looking; this part is also interesting to me. It dug into the ground about 7" after passing through the doe. 90% weight retention.
Doe #2: 230 yds. Walked ~15 yds before collapsing. Broadside heart shot.
Golf ball size exit:
Now, the other part...
Doe #3: 253 yds. Slightly quartering away, lung shot. She pivoted after the hit and collapsed, all in less than a second. I found the entry wound after looking for it. No exit. Outside, she looked undamaged. Inside, probably everything was destroyed. But now - if she ran and I were to track her, I would likely not find her. Impact velocity: 2654 fps.
That's all I saw; not a droplet of blood:
So, why all this on a long range forum? I was testing these bullets to build up confidence in them BEFORE I go on some long range hunt of a lifetime. Hunting with ammo that you have no FULL confidence in ruins any hunting experience.
When designing this load I had an 800 yds elk load in mind. I did my part, here are the ballistics of the finished ammo.
So, on paper this works comfortably to 700 yds and I'd take game with full conviction within 500 yards with these bullets. However, after that last doe my conviction got a bit eroded; this was at 253 yds!
I'm a long range shooter, my equipment works very well, it's just the terminal ballistics at a distance (well within the "expansion velocity"!) that now occupy my mind. My Mark V cannot take long bullets, and the jump is Weatherby-huge, which limits my options (secant ogives), but that is not really a problem.
So much has been already written about it; so much of it is splitting hairs... TSX vs TTSX vs LRX vs Hammers vs CX vs E-Tips and a number of others that people swear by... How to find confidence in any of this?
I have one more tag this season, for a buck. If I harvest another I'll report more on how these bullets work for me, if I find anything interesting. I want to sort it all out soon, and then make decisions whether to stick with these as a universal load for 0-700 yds, or go back to lead/copper bullets. Interbonds, Accubonds, Partitions, ELD-X (surprising) all work well. ABLRs work OK.
Wow, this post got long. I hope somebody will find it useful. Thank you all for sharing your knowledge.
Merry Christmas to all of you! Stay safe and happy hunting.
SS
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