I've been testing different .223 bullets that are made with deer sized game in mind. Some are heavy-for-caliber, others bonded copper jacketed lead, and even solid copper expanding.
My test media is the now defunct bullet test tube heavy wax media. It is supposed to come close to muscle tissue. Rifle is my bushmaster 20" H-bar.
First of this run of 3 bullets is the 65 gr. Sierra Game King. They're hard to get, apparently they only make one run every now and then, waited a year on the midway waiting list. I have heard that they're the cats meow for .223 hunting bullets,,--?
The first pic is the wound track, showing the expansion cavity and penetration, about 10" of the media. It cleared the first tube to be caught in the second. It fragmented until there was no lead left in the mangled jacket. All I found amounted to 56 grains, meaning some shards of lead were lost in the wound channel. Would it kill a deer? Certainly, but you'd be picking shards of lead from your teeth.
Second was the 55 gr. Hornady GMX bullet. It's like a Barnes, EXCEPT the bullet is composed of guilding metal,(same as copper jackets), so it's easier to shape or expand.
Over 12" of penetration. You can see the bullet at rest,,--barely.
Close up of where it came to rest.
continued next post;
My test media is the now defunct bullet test tube heavy wax media. It is supposed to come close to muscle tissue. Rifle is my bushmaster 20" H-bar.
First of this run of 3 bullets is the 65 gr. Sierra Game King. They're hard to get, apparently they only make one run every now and then, waited a year on the midway waiting list. I have heard that they're the cats meow for .223 hunting bullets,,--?
The first pic is the wound track, showing the expansion cavity and penetration, about 10" of the media. It cleared the first tube to be caught in the second. It fragmented until there was no lead left in the mangled jacket. All I found amounted to 56 grains, meaning some shards of lead were lost in the wound channel. Would it kill a deer? Certainly, but you'd be picking shards of lead from your teeth.
Second was the 55 gr. Hornady GMX bullet. It's like a Barnes, EXCEPT the bullet is composed of guilding metal,(same as copper jackets), so it's easier to shape or expand.
Over 12" of penetration. You can see the bullet at rest,,--barely.
Close up of where it came to rest.
continued next post;