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Loaded and ready to rock for deer

1.6K views 28 replies 18 participants last post by  Reacher  
#1 ·
I spent some time in the reloading room this weekend prepping brass and loading cartridges.

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For the third year in a row I’ll be using my stainless Tikka T3 Varmint in .223 Rem with 75 grain ELDM at 2915 fps muzzle velocity.

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Last year I filled my tag on a nice forkie at about 125 yards, the year prior I shot a spike on the last day (spike meat is better than no meat) at 475 yards. That ELDM is an angry little bullet.

I’m saving the Mighty -08 for elk.




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#3 ·
Marmots are on the menu as well. Lots of them. Maybe a badger or two.

So far it’s two cartridges, two deer.
 
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#4 ·
I did some loading for my model 70 Swede The magic powder was R-22, which I am totally out of and is totally unavailable now. The new powder I tried was IMR4831SC and performance on a scale of 1-10 was about a 7. With R-22 it was a 10+.
I have only 5 rounds loaded with R-22 left and the is it,,,forever.

I had 7 rounds and fired two at the range just to check, They made a figure 8 at 1oo yards with my 4x scope that has been on it since i bought this rifle in the last century. Late 1990's
 
#16 ·
You should have seen the inventory in March! I load for family and we went rat/marmot shooting in early April. I loaded over 1k rounds leading up to the trip.

Lucky, though, 4 rifles but only 2 recipes.

This was about 2/3 of what we used:

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Marmots at 500 yards are great practice.

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Head shots only counted if you called them prior. Like billiards.




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#17 · (Edited)
Good equipment and custom ammo is the ticket.

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#21 ·
I use a progressive press but like a single stage, I took the indexing arm out. It saves quite a bit of time just installing new 4-hole turrets. Plus, I use a powder thrower for .223 instead of weighing charges. Remarkably accurate and consistent.

And I neck size instead of full-length.
 
#23 ·
Crockpot marmot with taters and cream of mushroom soup. Meat just falls off the bone.
 
#24 ·
I am curious on the rate of twist for your Tikka? I can't get my .222 or 22-250 to shoot the Nosler 55gr E-tips worth a dang. The best bullet so far is the Nosler 40gr ballistic tip. I don't hunt deer with either, just predators. The 55's don't seem to stabilize in my 1:14 twist barrels and seem to hit the target sideways. I am picking up a couple of boxes of Nosler 40gr E-tips (lead free) this week. I occasionally hunt in N. CA. and they require lead free ammo.
 
#25 ·
bullet length is the critical measurement.1-14" is best for bullets under .800" which is why speer makes the 70gr semi pointed at .790.wichester makes the 64gr power point at .805 works in my 22-250 1-14 the .805 55grain ballistic tip is marginal if i push it hard. the perfect bullet length for 1-14 twist is like the55gr sierra flat base spitzer at .715" the 40gr is .696" so it is in that middle sweet zone for 1-14 remingtons 55gr flat base spitzer is .690 for a reason
 
#27 ·
Both of my Tikkas are 1-8”, which stabilize the 75 gr bullets well.

This was today, only 100 yards but 8 shots under .8” ain’t bad. Quite windy so I had a little more lateral dispersion than I like.

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1-14” twist, what kind of rifle do you have? AR style?
 
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#28 · (Edited)
I found this chart on another board years ago.

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As you can see, the slower the twist the lighter the bullet. Monometals are slightly different, as Baltz said, since they tend to be lighter per length, so you can get away with longer (therefore heavier) bullets.

Velocity also factors into stability, so if you’re marginal, push it fast (safely, of course).
 
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