I was granted a US utility patent (9,857,155 B2 on January 2, 2018) on a monolithic rifle bullet design which this new Berger bullet resembles to a rather startling degree. That design effort required 5 years of work. I offered my bullet design to the president of Berger a couple of years ago only to be summarily dismissed, saying Bryan Litz was their ballistician and they were not going to make copper bullets anyway. A paper of mine describing the design of my ULD bullet has been posted here in your Sniper's Hide "Resources" section since last Spring. While I do not intend to enforce this patent against Berger, I am fairly sure they will not be able to patent it themselves. I plan ultimately to place my patent into the public domain to prevent others from patenting its features to the detriment of the shooting community. I wish Berger and Bryan Litz good fortune and appreciate their valuable work in promoting the art and sport of ELR shooting.
Dan Warner is currently making a batch of prototypes of the latest Mark IIb design of my copper ULD bullet in 338-caliber for test-firing. That 338 bullet will weigh 246 grains and will be 1.910 inches in OAL. Based on my current research into the Interior Ballistics of Copper Bullets (PDF attached), I had to modify the bullet's afterbody design slightly. The OD of the gas-sealing rear driving band has been increased from 0.3382 to 0.3386 inches to promote better gas sealing in the barrel. The MkIIb bullet is now base-drilled using a 1/8-inch drill to a depth of 0.400 inches in order to port the base-pressure internally for better gas sealing in the barrel (similar to the old Minie-ball). The base of the boat-tail is now radiused at 0.300-inches (convex) to minimize bullet destabilization while traversing the muzzle-blast zone. I believe the 10.2-gr weight penalty for base-drilling will be a good trade for "perfect" gas obturation in the 338 rifle barrel which expands by 1.3 thousandths of an inch in internal diameter at the point of peak base-pressure during firing with a peak chamber pressure of 60,000 psi. The improved gas sealing of this bullet design should facilitate achieving "single-digit" extreme spreads in muzzle velocities, even at very high launch speeds. The G7-referenced BC of these 246-gr copper ULD 338-caliber bullets is estimated at 0.433.
My 375-caliber Mark IIb copper ULD bullet will weigh 335 grains and be 2.118 inches in OAL. My 375 bullet should have a G7 BC of 0.481. At this relatively light weight, my monolithic copper bullet can be fired much faster and still achieve single-digit spreads, which is critical in ELR shooting. From 375 barrels rifled at my recommended 7.0 inches per turn, the initial gyroscopic stability will be 3.1 for hyper-stability in a standard sea-level ICAO atmosphere. There is no reason to consider gain-twist barrels for firing my bullets made from tough "half hard" copper. Because of its better aerodynamics, my bullet will have a much greater maximum supersonic range than the new Berger 375's fired from the same cartridge. The relative performance of these bullet designs in subsequent transonic ELR flight remains to be seen; but the heavier, blunter-nosed Berger bullets might well be superior there. From the press-released photo of the lighter Berger 375 bullets, I see several design errors and trade-offs which I chose not to make. It is most unfortunate for all concerned that Berger chose not to work openly with me in developing their new monolithic copper bullet design.
Jim Boatright