Two out of how many? I've only shot 3 animals at 150, 240, and 260 yards with a 178 gr ELDX in a 30-06. All 3 shots had essentially what you described shallow penetration, almost zero weight retention, etc. After that I refused to use them again so my reference pool isn't huge. Although I know of several who've had similar experiences with them. Interesting about your bad experience with accubonds from pronghorn to elk I've never had a failure on a couple truck loads of north American game. Glad your experience with ELD-X was better then mine.I have had two instances of accubonds performing spectacularly bad, extremely shallow penetration, and I have zero instances of ELD-Xs doing the same on a couple truck loads of African PG.
See how that works.
^^This.But first you might consider cleaning all of the prior metal fouling out of your rifle with a copper solvent. Then shoot a fouling shot with a Barnes bullet before shooting your groups.
I shoot a variety of bullet and use Barnes for hunting most of the time.
I have not encountered a barrel that won't shoot Barnes but some don't like to mix copper bullets and regular jacketed bullets (which is a harder alloy).
Two out of how many? I've only shot 3 animals at 150, 240, and 260 yards with a 178 gr ELDX in a 30-06. All 3 shots had essentially what you described shallow penetration, almost zero weight retention, etc. After that I refused to use them again so my reference pool isn't huge. Although I know of several who've had similar experiences with them. Interesting about your bad experience with accubonds from pronghorn to elk I've never had a failure on a couple truck loads of north American game. Glad your experience with ELD-X was better then mine.
Everyone will have a different opinion, so here's mine. I took my .300 Win on my last safari. I had it loaded with 200 grain AccuBonds. Everything from an impala ewe that the property manager asked me to take for camp meat up through a big waterbuck bull died in their tracks or within just a few steps. No bullets were recovered as they all passed through. These were hand loads and are very accurate in my rifle. PM me if you want the load details.Hello gents, I am going to South Africa in June. Impala, Warthog, blesbok, blue wildebeest, and zebra will be on the menu. I am taking my Remington 700 Sendero in .300 win mag. My outfitter suggested Barnes TTSX ammo. I have tried this in factory as well as handloads, 180 and 200 grain varieties. All variants group around 2" at 100 yards. I feel like that is not very good accuracy, perhaps I am over-thinking it and that is sufficient. My rifle is currently zeroed with Hornady 200 grain ELD-X and it shoots 3/4 MOA groups every time. My outfitter does not want me to use the ELD-X. Has anybody used the Swift Scirocco 2? I tried the 180 grain version and it was sub 3/4 MOA, I believe the bonded bullet should be sufficient for these animals. I have also handloaded 180 grain Nosler Accubonds and they shot around 1-1.5 MOA.
I did a search and found very limited information on the Swift Scirocco, my apologies if this has been covered somewhere already.
I have had two instances of accubonds performing spectacularly bad, extremely shallow penetration, and I have zero instances of ELD-Xs doing the same on a couple truck loads of African PG.
See how that works.
I guess I’m against the grain here but I’m not a fan of Barnes and have successfully taken elk with the ELDX in 6.5prc.
In my one and only Africa trip, I rented a 30-06 and used basic hornady lead tipped bullets with success on wildebeest, sable, kudu, etc.