Nosler Team,
One thing I have been curious about is why your .270 bullets generally have lower BC than bullets of 7mm given same bullet weight or .308 of slightly lower SD. For example, the 7mm 140 Partition and BT have higher BC than the .270 equivalent and the 150 and 180 .30 Cal have higher listed BCs than 130/150 .270 bullets, even though the 270 are a bit higher SD. Was this an intentional design move or some other reason? Just curious as I noted that on AccuBond the .270 140 is higher than the 7mm and that for pretty much every other manufacturer, the relationship between SD and BC is evident (i.e. higher the SD, generally higher the BC - so a 130/150 .270 is generally higher BC than 150/180 .30 cal and equiv. weight 7mm). It is not something I'm worried about, but something I've noticed and have been curious about.
Thanks,
Lou
One thing I have been curious about is why your .270 bullets generally have lower BC than bullets of 7mm given same bullet weight or .308 of slightly lower SD. For example, the 7mm 140 Partition and BT have higher BC than the .270 equivalent and the 150 and 180 .30 Cal have higher listed BCs than 130/150 .270 bullets, even though the 270 are a bit higher SD. Was this an intentional design move or some other reason? Just curious as I noted that on AccuBond the .270 140 is higher than the 7mm and that for pretty much every other manufacturer, the relationship between SD and BC is evident (i.e. higher the SD, generally higher the BC - so a 130/150 .270 is generally higher BC than 150/180 .30 cal and equiv. weight 7mm). It is not something I'm worried about, but something I've noticed and have been curious about.
Thanks,
Lou