andrewctillman
Beginner
- Feb 6, 2013
- 225
- 1
Test results are in.
Muzzle velocity, 3,160 fps.
Velocity at target, about 2,985 fps.
Target:
two 5 gallon nylon Home depot buckets filled with water at 75 yards. (90% correlation to critters for frontal area and 95% for retained weight). 11 inches deep x 15 inches high. Center hit.
Expansion, uniform .604 average diameter. (.573 x .608 x .627 x .610).
Weight retention, 80.2 grains, 64%.
Height of bullet, 0.324 inches.
Penetration, 1 1/2 buckets or 16 inches. (No sign of denting rear of second bucket). And no noticable damage to the second bucket. (Lid remained tightly on).
Likely over pressure, .270 winchester class on first bucket which is unusual for a .308. It split the front and rear of the bucket open which is similar to a 130 grain 270 winchester, and a good indication of a bang flop on a heart shot. Almost completely tore it in two which is very unusual for a .308. (Usually requires magnum ctg at point blank range).
Observation about this bullet. I was plesantly surprised that it maintained its frontal area without the mushroom being swaged down parallel to the bearing surface of the bullet. The jacket was thick enough to support the expanded mushroom. About 1/4 inch of bearing surface left unexpanded above the boat tail solid base. Bright shiny lead core, probably has alot of tin in it? Lead fragments fused onto base of bullet and underneath mushroom suggests the bullet turned over 180 degrees and traveled base forward after penetrating the second bucket. Surprising since it is so short and over stabilized from 1-10 twist and with high MV. Generally not a good thing for a bullets integrity since the metal work hardens when it expands and can break off easily base forward. (This is how long for caliber Barnes X bullets loose their X petals).
7.62 NATO Mk 319 ammo (130 grain solid base fragmenting HP) has MV of 2950 fps and compltely tears first bucket in two at point blank range, severely damages second bucket, and recovered in third! 51 grains retained weight but only .324 diameter copper base remaining. Nosler not likely to duplicate MK319 as barrier blind load but far better than an unbonded bullet of this weight. Pictured 556 Mk318 on left and 762 Mk319 on right. (The Nosler 64 grain bonded solid base at 556 velocities equals or exceeds performance of the Mk318 on most targets).
The similarity of MK319 and 125 AB on first bucket demonstrates that the large expanded FA of a good bonded bullet at high velocity can nearly equal over pressure and temorary cavity of the most extreme fragmenting bullet.
Percentage of weight retention of the 125 grain AB is actually similar to a 180 grain Woodleigh out of a 30-06 at 400 fps less velocity! I like it.
Muzzle velocity, 3,160 fps.
Velocity at target, about 2,985 fps.
Target:
two 5 gallon nylon Home depot buckets filled with water at 75 yards. (90% correlation to critters for frontal area and 95% for retained weight). 11 inches deep x 15 inches high. Center hit.
Expansion, uniform .604 average diameter. (.573 x .608 x .627 x .610).
Weight retention, 80.2 grains, 64%.
Height of bullet, 0.324 inches.
Penetration, 1 1/2 buckets or 16 inches. (No sign of denting rear of second bucket). And no noticable damage to the second bucket. (Lid remained tightly on).
Likely over pressure, .270 winchester class on first bucket which is unusual for a .308. It split the front and rear of the bucket open which is similar to a 130 grain 270 winchester, and a good indication of a bang flop on a heart shot. Almost completely tore it in two which is very unusual for a .308. (Usually requires magnum ctg at point blank range).
Observation about this bullet. I was plesantly surprised that it maintained its frontal area without the mushroom being swaged down parallel to the bearing surface of the bullet. The jacket was thick enough to support the expanded mushroom. About 1/4 inch of bearing surface left unexpanded above the boat tail solid base. Bright shiny lead core, probably has alot of tin in it? Lead fragments fused onto base of bullet and underneath mushroom suggests the bullet turned over 180 degrees and traveled base forward after penetrating the second bucket. Surprising since it is so short and over stabilized from 1-10 twist and with high MV. Generally not a good thing for a bullets integrity since the metal work hardens when it expands and can break off easily base forward. (This is how long for caliber Barnes X bullets loose their X petals).
7.62 NATO Mk 319 ammo (130 grain solid base fragmenting HP) has MV of 2950 fps and compltely tears first bucket in two at point blank range, severely damages second bucket, and recovered in third! 51 grains retained weight but only .324 diameter copper base remaining. Nosler not likely to duplicate MK319 as barrier blind load but far better than an unbonded bullet of this weight. Pictured 556 Mk318 on left and 762 Mk319 on right. (The Nosler 64 grain bonded solid base at 556 velocities equals or exceeds performance of the Mk318 on most targets).
The similarity of MK319 and 125 AB on first bucket demonstrates that the large expanded FA of a good bonded bullet at high velocity can nearly equal over pressure and temorary cavity of the most extreme fragmenting bullet.
Percentage of weight retention of the 125 grain AB is actually similar to a 180 grain Woodleigh out of a 30-06 at 400 fps less velocity! I like it.