Dr.Carl Gremse, Senior Researcher of the Brandenburg State Forest Service (Germany), developed a very useful method to evaluate the bullet wounding behaviour.
That is an important point. If non toxic projectiles become mandatory, thing will have to change on what constitutes a proper hunting load.A political background to all these studies cannot be denied. Lead-free bullets are increasingly required in many areas of various countries in Europe. Not everyone at beginning liked that, especially not hunters who were satisfied with their classic old bullets for decades. There were initially problems with various lead-free bullets, external ballistic problems in older rifles, but also terminal ballistic so that it became necessary to demonstrate to us through various studies that it is possible to kill game with lead-free bullets. In the meantime, the majority of us believe that, but still not all.
Well you know what they say about marriage. There are 3 rings.Greetings all Hunters (especially fellow Rifle Grumps),
Reportedly, Barnes monumental expanding bullets are more reliable than when first introduced, especially their latest version, with that plastic thingy in the nose.
And that is definitely good news.
Having said that, evidently now and then, even that newest version fails to expand in some critter, resulting in an undesirable “ice pick type wound”.
With hunting rifles, I have experienced such consistently excellent performance from heavy for caliber, blunt shaped projectiles, within about 300 paces that, I see no reason to waste what little time I have left (I’m a geezer) with new bullet experimentation.
“Hollow point spitzers, bah-humbug”
If anyone wants to clobber me for that, go ahead.
Undoubtedly I’ve had worse.
(Been married twice).
Best Regards,
Velo Dog.
I sure hope you are correct about Peregrines as in 9-days I'm leaving for a TZ buffalo hunt and Peregrine Bushmasters are all I'm taking.I wonder if the pinholing (I've had it in 308 150gr TSX@ 2850fps odd MV reasonably close on an impala) isn't caused when either the bullet strikes no bone (well established) or the hollowpoint strikes at an angle which closes the hollow point rather than expands it. I think the peregrines with the wide meplat don't seem to have this issue because the impact pressure always expands the copper.
Clipped the top of the heart? He’s dead!
Sounds like the other shots were not necessary. Could have waited a few more minutes.
Have a great hunt Rafiki! What a pleasure.I sure hope you are correct about Peregrines as in 9-days I'm leaving for a TZ buffalo hunt and Peregrine Bushmasters are all I'm taking.
@Hunter-HabibPLEASE NOTE THAT THIS POST IS PURELY FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES WITH NO INTENTION WHATSOEVER TO CRITICIZE BARNES BULLETS
(I am still an avid fan & regular user)
Below is a 570Gr Barnes TSX bullet (fired from a .500 Nitro Express Federal Premium Cape Shok factory load at 2150 FPS) that was recovered from an African Cape buffalo. Expansion was non-existent and the Cape buffalo required other shots in order to be taken down.
Photograph Source: Thaba Mahaka Safaris
View attachment 637494
Below is a 300Gr Barnes TSX bullet (fired from a .375 Holland & Holland Magnum Barnes VOR-TX factory load at 2530 FPS) recovered from an Asiatic Gaur. Expansion was quite beautiful.
View attachment 637493
So here we have two scenarios involving the Barnes TSX bullet. One quite disconcerting & one quite encouraging.
Let's try to understand why this happens. In the late 2000s, quite a few reports were emerging of Barnes TSX bullets (as well as the earlier unbanded Barnes X bullet) failing to expand properly on certain big game when fired from certain calibers. The phenomenon was chalked up to either:
a) Faults in the initial batches of copper alloy
Or
b) Faulty hand loads (as well as some factory loads) which weren't being loaded to the ideal spec
Then, in the last one decade... the complaints suddenly seem to have stopped. Until the recent incident with the .500 Nitro Express and the Cape buffalo. As well as a few incidents involving the .470 Nitro Express (more details on those incidents will hopefully reach me soon).
I always discouraged usage of the Barnes TSX bullet on soft framed big game such as lions or leopards (or tigers, hypothetically speaking). My reasoning was that the all-copper hollow points would not expand quick enough on the great cats (esp. for broadside heart-lung shots taken at this kind of game feeding on baits). There would simply not be enough resistance in order for the bullets to begin expanding properly. But a Cape buffalo is a very thick framed game anima which provides ample resistance for bullets. And that 570Gr Barnes TSX bullet should have expanded properly.
My hypothesis is that the high velocity (2530 FPS) of the .375 Holland & Holland Magnum Barnes VOR-TX factory load enabled my 300Gr Barnes TSX bullet to open up satisfactorily. While the relatively low velocity (2150 FPS) of the .500 Nitro Express Federal Premium Cape Shok factory load impeded the bullet's expansion. This might also explain why there have also been documented issues of 500Gr Barnes TSX bullets failing to expand upon being fired from .470 Nitro Express rifles (at a velocity identical to the .500 Nitro Express) but not Barnes TSX bullets being fired from higher velocity calibers like the .375 Holland & Holland Magnum or .416 Rigby.
Any thoughts/ insights here would be most welcome.
Warmest Regards,
Habib
My experience is the larger the animal and thicker skin the Barnes TSX is great…when you go the opposite way not so muchI used the 180gr TSX out of a .30/06 @ ~2600 in Namibia. I got good performance on zebra, gemsbok, two springbok and a steinbok from 20 yds to 250 yds. All made exit, but wrecked the vitals. I wouldn’t hesitate to use that combo again.
I shot a buffalo, two BWB, warthog, zebra, waterbuck, kudu and an impala with a .416 Ruger and a 400gr TSX. Longest shot was ~125 yds. All were one shot kills. Only bullets recovered were from a frontal shot on the buff and an insurance shot with a Banded Solid that went thru the spine, out the brisket and lodged in a leg.View attachment 637597
I’ve used Barnes TSX, TTSX and LRX in several other rounds at higher velocity and got similar or better performance on deer sized game. A friend used a 127gr LRX from a 6.5 CM last year to take a cow elk and got exit. He’s also gotten exit with a 130gr TTSX from a .308 on elk. He is an avid user of Barnes bullets and prefers lighter weights for caliber at higher velocity.
@SRvetHard to draw any firm conclusions from a sample of one bullet. I am sure that every bullet design will have experienced a failure to expand or perform adequately at some time or other but unless the bullet is recovered it is hard to say if it has failed. Saying that it is entirely possible for one batch to be more or less likely to expand at a given velocity due to material variations, alterations in annealing etc. Was the batch of ammunition chronographed as giving 2150fps or is that data off the box? I assume the range for both shots was similar - sub 80m? If the data was off the box then could the velocity have been much lower?
I have a moderate amount of experience with Barnes bullets having shot three to four hundred deer with them as well as some African game, buff, warthog, kudu etc with the 300 grain .375 TSX at 2550fps. I agree that velocity helps these bullets do incredible things. Providing there is sufficient velocity I find they show signs of very rapid expansion indeed.
I should add that I tend to use the 130gr TTSX at 3000fps (.308W) and the 120g TTSX (7mm Rem Mag at 3450fps)