Curious to see where this thread goes. Currently about to go down the lathe turned solid projectile route myself, but in .30 cal (.300NM).
I have so far loaded up some 198 Warner Flatlines and some 205 Badland ICBM projectiles to shoot on my next time out on the range. I've had these bullets sitting on my shelf for a while, and finally decided to load some up to play with. I was scared off by the supposedly short amount of freebore you need (or consequent big jump to the lands if using longer freebore), but was pleasantly surprised to find out that I could load the flatlines to ~0.010" off the lands and still mag feed them through my CIP mags with my standard freebore setup.
The flatlines have a very impressive BC - much higher than many (if not all) .30 cal projectiles. According to AB with it's custom drag curves, it's noticeably flatter out to distance than a 230 Berger. The issue with the flatlines, is that they are not designed to transition (Dan Warner stated that himself in another thread), but I haven't seen much reviews from end users on how they actually handle transition.
The other .30 cal solids are designed to transition and go into transonic, so theoretically they can handle that better. However, they have a lower BC than their jacketed counterparts (215, 230 Bergers, etc.) - this is comparing BC numbers from the manufacturers themelselves. The advantage you get with these projectiles is that they will fly much more predictably and reliably than their jacketed counterparts, as they are much more consistently produced, and you don't have to worry about jackets and cores deforming on it's way to the target.
I'm curious to see where this thread goes, as it appears the .30 and .33 cal projectile options are very similar. Not many people seem to be using solids in these calibers, so actual end user reviews are few and far between.
Now that I have found out that I can load up solids in my system without them having a crazy jump, I hope that through my upcoming testing, and through the reviews of others here, I can flush out the following:
1. Do the flatlines actually transition poorly in actual practice? If they perform well through transition, they look like they will be a winner. If not, I don't want to be stuck with expensive solids that are limited to 2,000 yards.
2. If the flatlines don't work out, will the other solids (CE, Badlands, etc.) have enough of a consistency flight path advantage over their jacketed counterparts to be worthwhile? Supposedly AB did a bunch of Doppler testing recently on just this - perhaps it will get released to the public soon.
3. Are the BC's of the CE Lazers and Badlands projo's in .30/.33 cal as deflated as they state? Or is it a conservative number which is much higher in actuality, making it more competitive with the Berger Hybrids, etc?
Looking forward to hearing others experience with lathe turned solids in these "smaller" ELR calibers. I hope to provide an update in few weeks with my own results down range with solids.