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Unless I’m mistaken, they still make a 105gr gr in 6mm. Not a “hunting” bullet but I have used it on antelope and it did the job. They also make 108gr Eld-m as well as 110gr a-tip. You’re more likely to see a 115gr-120gr Eld-m from Hornady than a 105gr from Nosler IMO. Nosler is about 3 steps behind at this point…Hornady made a 105 gr. bullet for a while but they discontinued it. They also dropped the 100 gr. spire point flat base as well. (Strong very bad language group needed at this point)
Paul B.
The Hornady 105 HPBT is a serious good bullet. I almost cannot believe how well it has worked each and every time from a 243 Win, 6 ARC to a 240 Wby. It is a deer bullet, no if, ands or buts about it. In my older stuff, the 95 BT is also really good, but lacks some length, but for the older 1-10 guns, it's dynamite as well.Unless I’m mistaken, they still make a 105gr gr in 6mm. Not a “hunting” bullet but I have used it on antelope and it did the job. They also make 108gr Eld-m as well as 110gr a-tip. You’re more likely to see a 115gr-120gr Eld-m from Hornady than a 105gr from Nosler IMO. Nosler is about 3 steps behind at this point…
The Hornady load manual #10 shows the105 gr. A-MAX as discontinued and a 105 gr. match bullet still in production. BTW, the 105 gr. bullet I was thinking of was a round nose bullet that shot very well in a .243 I owned.Unless I’m mistaken, they still make a 105gr gr in 6mm. Not a “hunting” bullet but I have used it on antelope and it did the job. They also make 108gr Eld-m as well as 110gr a-tip. You’re more likely to see a 115gr-120gr Eld-m from Hornady than a 105gr from Nosler IMO. Nosler is about 3 steps behind at this point…
Long ago I used 105 grain Speer bullets from my 6mm Remington. They shot great! Was shaped more like a "semi-spitzer" as I recall. Could be wrong. That was 1970's and 1980's.The Hornady load manual #10 shows the105 gr. A-MAX as discontinued and a 105 gr. match bullet still in production. BTW, the 105 gr. bullet I was thinking of was a round nose bullet that shot very well in a .243 I owned.
Paul B.
I'm not 100% sold on the ELD-X bullet the accuracy is there but not sold on the on game performance yet ....103 eldx is a great bullet. Hornady are making some nice bullets right now. However they are not making bonded bullets and I do think that is a hole in their product line…just like I think Noslers 50bullet packs across its whole product line is annoying. Surely ballistic tips in all weights could be boxes of 100.
A 110-115 gr ABLR would be a good one!Long ago I used 105 grain Speer bullets from my 6mm Remington. They shot great! Was shaped more like a "semi-spitzer" as I recall. Could be wrong. That was 1970's and 1980's.
Still have quite a few Nosler 95 grain Ballistic Tips for the 6mm Rem, and some 100 gr Partitions as well. They've both been excellent deer bullets. It would be nice to see a newer, longer, high BC Nosler bullet for the fast twist 6's. I'm thinking the AccuBond Long Range at about 110 grains could be just super.
I do have a 6mm Creed - don't shoot it very often though. I think that I'll do some long-range steel plinking with it this winter. The Hornady 103 ELD-X and 108 ELD-M both shoot well from it.
Regards, Guy
Yeah it would! Except why mess around….Nosler should just make it 120gr and get ahead of the curve for once. I’m not sure, that may take a faster twist than 1:8?A 110-115 gr ABLR would be a good one!
JD338
I would agree if a 120 ABLR will stabilize in a 8t.Yeah it would! Except why mess around….Nosler should just make it 120gr and get ahead of the curve for once. I’m not sure, that may take a faster twist than 1:8?