• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Hornady A Tip Match, anyone?

Their asking price precludes excitement! Have never been a big Hornady user, now there is a better than even chance I never will be!! I just do not like to be gouged!!
If they don't discontinue the ELDs, they will continue to be priced lower than Sierra and Berger bullets.
 
If they don't discontinue the ELDs, they will continue to be priced lower than Sierra and Berger bullets.
They would be shooting themselves in the foot if they discontinued eldm's.
Let's face it, guys have been shooting great scores and setting records as is with what's already available at half the cost.
Sure people are gonna buy them. But how many people can afford them dictates how many they'll sell.
I can only hope that they work out great for those that do give them a shot, maybe it'll move the market to a point where the bullets that I do shoot with great success become cheaper.
 
Tex,
Counterintuitive to me, but a steeped in bullet design, is that the front of the bullet is lightened rather than made heavier, to improve BC. I haven't studied it (yet) but don't understand why a hollow/lightened rear isn't a better choice...could just be dealing with the propellant, or the lighter aluminum base might get peeled off.

Another aspect of bullet design is the geometric effects of aerodynamics vs the intertial effects of more mass. It appears to me that the optimum density to maximize both is LESS dense than lead. Thus the hollow tips, plastic tips, and aluminum tips.

The concept is based on the fact that bullets are subject to drag forces all over, but the drag forces are not the same from front to back. When you add up all of these drag forces, they average out to a single point. (Center of pressure). It matters in bullet design to control the location of this point and also the bullets center of gravity. Using an aluminum tip gives them some control and might also allow a longer and higher BC bullet than lead and copper jacket alone would allow.
 
Last edited:
Dgeesaman,
What you're describing is the Center of Pressure. I've never studied aerodynamics of even played with radio controlled airplanes (a gap in my nerdiness) but I do recall that rocket (or bullet) is stable with the Center of Pressure ahead of the center of gravity. Seems back ward to me. If drag is at the rear, it would tend to keep the front in front and the back in back. For example: a parachute. --Jerry
 
Seems like plastic tips would be better than aluminum if you want to go the tipped route. The heavier the tip, the less effective it is at doing its job, which is to allow for a longer bullet with a more compact inertia. Any misalignment is also going to cause more problems if the tip is heavy. I wonder if they’re tying to mitigate the self inflicted marketing challenge of convincing people their tips don’t melt.
 
Or a bigger aluminum tip. I think partly they are addressing the melting plastic, but also turned metal tips are more precise than molded plastic tips. I think they are trying to make a hybrid--semi turned solid and semi-lead. I like the looks of the Alco bullets that take the concept farther.

https://www.alcobullets.com/-ALCO-P...at-Tail-Aluminum-Tip-ULD--Box-of-50_p_26.html

bc of .832 compared to berger 184 with bc of .695
 
Dgeesaman,
What you're describing is the Center of Pressure. I've never studied aerodynamics of even played with radio controlled airplanes (a gap in my nerdiness) but I do recall that rocket (or bullet) is stable with the Center of Pressure ahead of the center of gravity. Seems back ward to me. If drag is at the rear, it would tend to keep the front in front and the back in back. For example: a parachute. --Jerry
True, but what's the BC of a parachute? Or more analogous, the BC of an arrow.

Thats why bullets need to spin - to counteract the instability that comes from a CoP and CoG being inverted.
 
Or a bigger aluminum tip. I think partly they are addressing the melting plastic, but also turned metal tips are more precise than molded plastic tips. I think they are trying to make a hybrid--semi turned solid and semi-lead. I like the looks of the Alco bullets that take the concept farther.

https://www.alcobullets.com/-ALCO-P...at-Tail-Aluminum-Tip-ULD--Box-of-50_p_26.html

bc of .832 compared to berger 184 with bc of .695
Have those bc’s been independently verified? The nose on those looks awfully short. I also wonder if you’re not asking for trouble in terms of balance by increasing the mass of the tip that much. It’s an interesting solution to the problem of getting higher BC bullets and still keeping them controllable, but I’d expect them to have their own challenges to overcome, cost not being the least of them. Then again, I have zero experience with these so maybe it’s not as difficult as I’m imagining. We’ve come to expect a stunning level of precision in jacketed hollowpoints. That’s tough to improve upon. Solids seem like a better route to go if you’re going to bow to the BC gods.
 
Did they receive a contact with the military, and this may be what they are loading for it for there long range stuff? Just a thought.
 
Ah. I found a video explaining the aluminum. It’s a manufacturing issue. Plastic is superior but they couldn’t make plastic tips as big as they wanted because the injection molding process is difficult with bulky parts. This makes sense. It’s a compromise between mass characteristics, cost and achievable length.
 
Did they receive a contact with the military, and this may be what they are loading for it for there long range stuff? Just a thought.

I could be wrong but I’m going to say no not to my knowledge the A-Tip had nothing to do with any military testing or contract.
 
Solids seem like a better route to go if you’re going to bow to the BC gods.

I’m going to say depending on how the solids are made they will be more temperamental. The solid doesn’t give like a jacketed bullet will to some extent. Also I feel solids going back to being temperamental and how they are made the size of solid and the actual bore/groove size of the barrel should be very close. What I’m saying here for example and will use a .30cal barrel...if the groove size of the barrel is .3085 and the solid is .3080” it’s going to fit looser in the barrel.

Later, Frank
Bartlein Barrels
 
How is the tip made on there 750 gr. Amx it’s the same principle. Did they use that bullet or something similar for there long range application.
 
I’m going to say depending on how the solids are made they will be more temperamental. The solid doesn’t give like a jacketed bullet will to some extent. Also I feel solids going back to being temperamental and how they are made the size of solid and the actual bore/groove size of the barrel should be very close. What I’m saying here for example and will use a .30cal barrel...if the groove size of the barrel is .3085 and the solid is .3080” it’s going to fit looser in the barrel.

Later, Frank
Bartlein Barrels
For sure - I totally agree. Solids have their own issues - the ones these aluminum tips are trying to solve. But as with everything, we're trading one set of problems for another. I love that Hornady even tried to do this at scale, even if I find their marketing a bit over the top. (seriously? sequential packaging? And a cloth bag to clean them with? How silly is that? It's insulting to their customers' intelligence.) The concept is good IF they can sort out the problems inherent in the design. I'm looking forward to seeing how these turn out.
 
Ah. I found a video explaining the aluminum. It’s a manufacturing issue. Plastic is superior but they couldn’t make plastic tips as big as they wanted because the injection molding process is difficult with bulky parts. This makes sense. It’s a compromise between mass characteristics, cost and achievable length.
I believe the article at the link below contains the video you are referring to. Looks like Hornady concluded that Al was superior to plastic for this application and future development.

This video also answers many other questions that have been posed here and other places. It’s about 18 minutes long but worth viewing if you want to be informed.

https://www.gunsamerica.com/digest/...tm_campaign=/digest/hornadys-aluminum-tipped/
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,836
Messages
2,204,477
Members
79,157
Latest member
Bud1029
Back
Top