.300winmag
Handloader
- Oct 17, 2011
- 660
- 1
Alright, so earlier this year I mentioned the plan to get elk with the 215 Berger Hybrid, 210 ABLR, and 212 ELD-X and me along with my two buddies managed to get two with each bullet on some late season cows. All were shot from the same rifle, all loaded with H1000 and all at 2,960-3,000FPS, ranges were 235yds to 702 yards.
Rifle specs:
.300 Win. Mag.
Remington 700
McMillan A3 stock
28" Hart 1-9" twist Hunter BR contour
Jewell trigger @ 1lb
Kelbly rings and 20MOA Bases
.750" Defensive Edge brake
Leupold VX3 6.5-20x50LR
Berger 215gr Hybrid 2,991fps (standard go to load)
Got one cow at 275 yards, shooting up hill facing us (pic included) bullet entered chest, made soup of lungs and chunk out of heart, bullet didn't make it through diaphragm. Dropped like a ton of bricks.
Second cow shot at 702 yards, broadside feeding. Bullet entered mid way up the body, tight behind shoulder, cow hunched at the shot, trotted a few steps and started to wobble and was down in less than 15 yards. Caliber entrance and half dollar exit, lungs destroyed.
Load work up super easy, not hard to tune, not jump/jam sensitive, groups at 100 sub MOA, .3" normal. This is my bullet of choice.
Nosler ABLR 2,960FPS
First cow at 688 yards, broadside. Shot entered just above centerline of body, 4" behind shoulder, cow dropped like a rock, picked its head up 2-3 times and was dead. Recovered bullet under hide on off side, forgot it up at the Cabin but it was literally just like the pictures on the box, and internally the bullet performed just like any other AB I've used. Will post pics and stats of the bullet when I get back up there and get it.
Second cow was shot at 297 yards, through the shoulder, surprisingly, same performance was observed, only the bullet exited just behind the off side shoulder.
Bullet was hard to get to shoot, very sensitive to seating depth, liked a lot of jump and groups were in the .5-.6" at 100 yards. Was pleasantly surprised by the terminal performance of this bullet, however, i have more respect for it than I did, I thought it was going to be a little soft but it held together and did great, wouldn't hesitate to use them on elk again one bit.
Hornady 212gr ELD-X 2,986FPS
235 yards, shot behind shoulder, elk took off as if not hit, required 4 shots total to bring it down, bullets were blowing up on impact and fragmenting everywhere, not penetrating worth a crap. ended up losing front shoulder and rib meat on the cow.
Second cow was at 348 yards, again, four shots to the boiler required, 3 of the bullets fragmented and one appeared to work as it should, slightly larger than caliber entrance, grape fruit sized exit, that dropped the cow.
Really put off by this bullet, it was a little sensitive to seating depth but not terrible, groups in the .5" range at 100 yards. Out of 8 bullets, 1 worked like it should have. I will not use these bullets again, and I don't think the my should have blown up at those intermediate ranges.
So after the season, myself and one buddy are sticking with the Berger 215's for our go to hunting ammo, and my other buddy is love struck by the Nosler 210 ABLR.
Hope you find this informative and useful, do what you please with the information
Rifle specs:
.300 Win. Mag.
Remington 700
McMillan A3 stock
28" Hart 1-9" twist Hunter BR contour
Jewell trigger @ 1lb
Kelbly rings and 20MOA Bases
.750" Defensive Edge brake
Leupold VX3 6.5-20x50LR
Berger 215gr Hybrid 2,991fps (standard go to load)
Got one cow at 275 yards, shooting up hill facing us (pic included) bullet entered chest, made soup of lungs and chunk out of heart, bullet didn't make it through diaphragm. Dropped like a ton of bricks.
Second cow shot at 702 yards, broadside feeding. Bullet entered mid way up the body, tight behind shoulder, cow hunched at the shot, trotted a few steps and started to wobble and was down in less than 15 yards. Caliber entrance and half dollar exit, lungs destroyed.
Load work up super easy, not hard to tune, not jump/jam sensitive, groups at 100 sub MOA, .3" normal. This is my bullet of choice.
Nosler ABLR 2,960FPS
First cow at 688 yards, broadside. Shot entered just above centerline of body, 4" behind shoulder, cow dropped like a rock, picked its head up 2-3 times and was dead. Recovered bullet under hide on off side, forgot it up at the Cabin but it was literally just like the pictures on the box, and internally the bullet performed just like any other AB I've used. Will post pics and stats of the bullet when I get back up there and get it.
Second cow was shot at 297 yards, through the shoulder, surprisingly, same performance was observed, only the bullet exited just behind the off side shoulder.
Bullet was hard to get to shoot, very sensitive to seating depth, liked a lot of jump and groups were in the .5-.6" at 100 yards. Was pleasantly surprised by the terminal performance of this bullet, however, i have more respect for it than I did, I thought it was going to be a little soft but it held together and did great, wouldn't hesitate to use them on elk again one bit.
Hornady 212gr ELD-X 2,986FPS
235 yards, shot behind shoulder, elk took off as if not hit, required 4 shots total to bring it down, bullets were blowing up on impact and fragmenting everywhere, not penetrating worth a crap. ended up losing front shoulder and rib meat on the cow.
Second cow was at 348 yards, again, four shots to the boiler required, 3 of the bullets fragmented and one appeared to work as it should, slightly larger than caliber entrance, grape fruit sized exit, that dropped the cow.
Really put off by this bullet, it was a little sensitive to seating depth but not terrible, groups in the .5" range at 100 yards. Out of 8 bullets, 1 worked like it should have. I will not use these bullets again, and I don't think the my should have blown up at those intermediate ranges.
So after the season, myself and one buddy are sticking with the Berger 215's for our go to hunting ammo, and my other buddy is love struck by the Nosler 210 ABLR.
Hope you find this informative and useful, do what you please with the information