Is there any real benefit to the high BC .224 bullets. I know that compared to a basic FMJ there is a lot to gain, but for the 68-70g vs the 75-77 it seems like a loss. Here are the number I came up with. I used Hodgins load data from their site for the weights to get starting velocity(varget powder). I used Hornadays site for the trajectories. By my calculations between the high BC bullets there is minimal difference the only thing I am seeing is the heavier bullets have more drop, 20-40in more, while mostly preserving the same energy is within 5 ftlb. I know higher BC will also help with wind drift but is going from .243 to a .355 going to make that much of a difference?
------------------------BC--muzzle---yds--fps--ftlb-drop-yds--vel--ftlb-drop
55g FMJ,-------------.243--3000-----300-1943-461-8.4 / 800-969-156-283
68g hornady OTM---.355--2800-----300-2080-653-8.5 / 800-1198-217-220
70g berger vld------.374--2800-----300-2113-694-8.3 / 800-1248-235-210
75g hornady OTM---.395--2600-----300-1975-650-9.7 / 800-1201-218-239
75g Berger VLD-----.421--2600-----300-2011-674-9.5 / 800-1256-238-263
------------------------BC--muzzle---yds--fps--ftlb-drop-yds--vel--ftlb-drop
55g FMJ,-------------.243--3000-----300-1943-461-8.4 / 800-969-156-283
68g hornady OTM---.355--2800-----300-2080-653-8.5 / 800-1198-217-220
70g berger vld------.374--2800-----300-2113-694-8.3 / 800-1248-235-210
75g hornady OTM---.395--2600-----300-1975-650-9.7 / 800-1201-218-239
75g Berger VLD-----.421--2600-----300-2011-674-9.5 / 800-1256-238-263