.224 55 grain Sierra Gameking BTSP

filmjunkie4ever

Handloader
May 4, 2011
2,075
1,716
Years ago I used this bullet from a .22-250 to kill a nice 3x4 mule deer buck, the bullet was not recovered. A 200ish yard shot in the ribs behind the shoulder dropped him in his tracks.

My current .22-250, a Ruger M77 Hawkeye loves this bullet on top of 35 grains of Varget. According to the Garmin this load clocks 3650 fps from its 22” barrel. This has been a dynamite load for coyotes and chucks for me.

I recently did a water jug test on this bullet, recovering the pictured result in the 2nd jug at 150 yards. This is Berger-like performance and explains why that buck dropped so quickly years ago, and coyotes and chucks do likewise today.

The fragmented remains weighed 27 grains, 49% of the original 55 grains.
 

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Very cool. I just started shooting the Sierra 65 grain GK in my Montana 223. So far it’s accurate and runs about 3190.

Those little bullets are pretty tough for what they are.
Agreed. And they shoot super well!
 
Years ago I used this bullet from a .22-250 to kill a nice 3x4 mule deer buck, the bullet was not recovered. A 200ish yard shot in the ribs behind the shoulder dropped him in his tracks.

My current .22-250, a Ruger M77 Hawkeye loves this bullet on top of 35 grains of Varget. According to the Garmin this load clocks 3650 fps from its 22” barrel. This has been a dynamite load for coyotes and chucks for me.

I recently did a water jug test on this bullet, recovering the pictured result in the 2nd jug at 150 yards. This is Berger-like performance and explains why that buck dropped so quickly years ago, and coyotes and chucks do likewise today.
The fragmented remains weighed 27 grains, 49% of the original 55 grains.
Hello. The recovery results from the water bottle at 150 yards, along with the fragmentation level of the bullet, can indicate its ability to spread energy and effectiveness when destroying the target. I am quite impressed with this.
 
That was the same load we used in the 22.250 as kids growing up. It was dynamite on goats in the hills. More recently we have used the same bulllet in our 223’s and it has worked a treat on smaller feral pigs and once on a yearling red with a neck shot. We can buy them here in a “super roo” pack which is 1,000 projectiles. Just ran out of them yesterday doing a rainy day reloading session.
 
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