Re: Honest Opinion: Berger and Barnes bullet
I cannot comment on the Bergers.
The TSX for .223 has lifted a veil on what is/was thought of and referred to as a marginal caliber for deer. The bullets hold together and do not explode as most smaller .223 bullets do.
If you do not hit bone with this bullet, it will pencil clean through. I load this bullet for my AR as my kids hunt with it. They are more prone to get "less than perfect" shot placement, and I want to put all the odds in their favor I can.
For 30 cal deer hunting, I still use lead nose bullets. They expand no matter what they hit, and at our hunting ranges and the velocity I push them, they pass through. No more BST's for me, they explode at close range and high velocity and turn your 30 cal into a varmit rifle.
My 8 y/o's first kill last season. This is an exit wound in the neck that missed the spine from a 62grn TSX in 223 ~2900 MV. Shot at 75 yards, no expansion. Still Bang/Flop due to shot placement though.
I cannot comment on the Bergers.
The TSX for .223 has lifted a veil on what is/was thought of and referred to as a marginal caliber for deer. The bullets hold together and do not explode as most smaller .223 bullets do.
If you do not hit bone with this bullet, it will pencil clean through. I load this bullet for my AR as my kids hunt with it. They are more prone to get "less than perfect" shot placement, and I want to put all the odds in their favor I can.
For 30 cal deer hunting, I still use lead nose bullets. They expand no matter what they hit, and at our hunting ranges and the velocity I push them, they pass through. No more BST's for me, they explode at close range and high velocity and turn your 30 cal into a varmit rifle.
My 8 y/o's first kill last season. This is an exit wound in the neck that missed the spine from a 62grn TSX in 223 ~2900 MV. Shot at 75 yards, no expansion. Still Bang/Flop due to shot placement though.