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Does anyone have experience with this bullet in any cartridge? If so let me know what you are getting for your true BC and what cartridge and muzzle velocity.
Thanks,
Jon
The 168 SMK I'd a bit higher than that. Somewhere around .560 in my experience.I truly believe the BC of the 171 MB is overstated. In comparison to the 168SMK(.494) and 168VLD(.617) the 171MB(.695) is off the chart.
The Hornady 162 BTHP Match is only .610 and moving to 175/180 grain bullets the highest I know of is the Berger 180 Hybrid and it is only .674.
My only experiences with Barnes bullets have been they are too hard to tune and copper a barrel way too quickly.
I would be interested in how real world "dope" compares with what you get from a ballistic calculator with the stated BC on the MB bullets. Please post your velocities and actual vs. real yardage data ASAP.
The 168 SMK I'd a bit higher than that. Somewhere around .560 in my experience.
I know what it says. I've found this and litz book shows it at .565 there are also several other people out that have had this result. Advertised is awesome but like you are thinking can be inflated to an extent the BC might be correct but at what velocity. Another thing is Barnes are typically longer than other bullets by weight so it might likely be higher than other bullets in its weight class.
I truly believe the BC of the 171 MB is overstated. In comparison to the 168SMK(.494) and 168VLD(.617) the 171MB(.695) is off the chart.
The Hornady 162 BTHP Match is only .610 and moving to 175/180 grain bullets the highest I know of is the Berger 180 Hybrid and it is only .674.
My only experiences with Barnes bullets have been they are too hard to tune and copper a barrel way too quickly.
I would be interested in how real world "dope" compares with what you get from a ballistic calculator with the stated BC on the MB bullets. Please post your velocities and actual vs. real yardage data ASAP.
First off, Barnes advertises this bullet at .645 G1BC, and its sectional density is .303 lb/in*in
Secondly, a G1BC of .645 is essentially a G7BC of .330 (Litz's book, page 459 - JLK .284 caliber 180gr BTHP).
Form factor is equal to sectional density divided by G7BC...
Thus the form factor of the 171bmb assuming BARNE'S OWN published BC is: .303/.330 = .918
For reference, the FF of the Berger 7mm 175xld (wicked vld) is .923. The 180 hybrid is .924, and the 180vld is .946.
Does it seem "reasonable" this 171bmb is more streamlined than all of these other bullets (which are vlds)?
Thirdly, my magnetospeed clocks these right at 2700fps, and it takes me 8.8mrad up from 100 yard zero to smoke prairie dog steel @ 1000 yards. That translates to ~.62ish according to my calculator.
This is with a POINTED 171bmb, I don't have data for unpointed.
I guess I don't see why it has to be a VLD to have a low form factor. Liz states the 162 Amax has one of the lowest form factors at .94 and it isn't a vld.
In fact, the 162amax is indeed an aggressive secant-ogive VLD.
The long skinny ogive of a secant/VLD bullet helps make it long for is weight, streamlining it and decreasing drag - so the best form factors are pretty much always VLDs.
Post your results of testing up when you get a chance. I'm interested in how they stack up as well.This has not been a fight at all! I have really enjoyed [MENTION=96711]HodgdonExtreme[/MENTION] comments and observations. Since I don't shoot the 175s in my 7MM08 I am only looking at how the 171MB will stack up against my 168SMK. But I will be sure to measure up some bullets to see how they compare to other brands.
Post your results of testing up when you get a chance. I'm interested in how they stack up as well.
That's awesome shoot4fun, who cares if you eat crow when the bullet is awesome.
Did you take any measurements of bearing length and overall length to see how consistent they are?
[MENTION=1962]shoot4fun[/MENTION]
Thanks for taking the time to test and post up!
A note on BC, however.
The elevation difference between .62 and .645 @ 500 yards is less than 3/4", assuming your stated velocity of ~2550fps.
I always get out to 1000+ yards when confirming BC when dealing with high BC and/or high velocity bullets.
I picked up a box or two of those 168 smk and really like them. The bc is decent and they are easy to load for compared to the amax.No problem [MENTION=96711]HodgdonExtreme[/MENTION]
At one point I was shooting the 168SMK behind 47.2 grains H4350. It was compressed as hell but they made 2800+ and shot great. It was a Badger action and 26" Bartlien.
That was the max load published by Hodgdon in 2010 but they have cut it back a bit now.
I picked up a box or two of those 168 smk and really like them. The bc is decent and they are easy to load for compared to the amax.
What little bit I've played with them the Litz .56 bc has been spot on to 1000 which is nice since it's advertised at .48 by Sierra.True. The SMK as a whole is likely the most "jump tolerant" bullet out there.