I got to shoot the Berger 208's
CBTO of 2.350
.170 feebore 1-10 HV 30 inch .008 off landsHi Bill. What is freebore of your chamber and barrel twist, contour and length ? What jump for this test rounds?
And please, could you measure the COAL of 208's cartridge with
Best,
Ilya
Thank you !.170 feebore 1-10 HV 30 inch .008 off lands
That's a good question. I prefer to point my own bullets because I can do it with much greater consistency than the manufacturer, and it's really not that much work. The point I was trying make is that solely in terms of BC, several of the new offerings from Berger do not represent much (if any) of an advantage over the bullets we've already been using from them for some time. In order to illustrate that fact, you have to be comparing apples to apples (i.e. comparing BCs of bullets pointed by the user to bullets pointed at the factory).
As you noted, for some having bullets pointed by the manufacturer will be a bonus. Nonetheless, I'm hoping there is some additional advantage to some of these new bullets above and beyond that. For example, with its longer bearing surface, does the 208 show better stability than the 200.20X? Or at least, reduced pitch/yaw straight out of the bore? I can imagine there might be better reasons to be shooting these bullets than a perceived increased in BC, which effectively disappears if you're already pointing bullets at home.
@Willow The real target market for this bullet is the F-TR competitor so think speeds in the 2550 to 2650 range for non-nuclear loads. The two most used bullets in F-TR today are Berger's 200.20x and 200 hybrid. Both have been used to win pretty much everything, and both can be tuned to shoot extremely well in a 308 at 1000 yards with a slight edge in BC to the 20x and some folks saying they can get a better vertical from the 200H, though it's hard to tell for sure.
I haven't tested the 208 yet. [sarcasm]I've noted before that Capstone forgot to call me about the release of these last yr and I took delivery of 4000ea 200.20x bullets just before Christmas[/sarcasm] . On top of that I just got back the shipment of 500+ loaded rounds that I'd shipped to South Africa last fall for a trip that got cancelled this month. Add in the already cancelled matches this yr and I'm pretty well set for this yr and next.
That said, I do want to get these running, and I have some friends testing the 208s with F-TR rifles and they seem to be getting precision on the level of the 200.20x at velocities that we think of as the "low node" for the 200.20x(low-mid 2600s). I think it's going to work, and it will save the time pointing bullets.
Berger doesn't really point these in what we think of in the classic sense. They have figured out how to get the lead core up into the meplat so the cavity at the nose is gone and the meplats are uniform and smaller than traditional HP target bullets.
I have a bunch of bullets loaded at 43.1 grains with different CBTO. but no place to shoot all ranges closed in Calif.I got to shoot the Berger 208's yesterday I was using Varget with a CBTO of 2.350. Center target is Berger 200.20X at 43.4 of Varget same CBTO, the one to the left was me moving windage 1 check left. I now need to check on speed and SD.
View attachment 1163084
@Willow The real target market for this bullet is the F-TR competitor so think speeds in the 2550 to 2650 range for non-nuclear loads. The two most used bullets in F-TR today are Berger's 200.20x and 200 hybrid. Both have been used to win pretty much everything, and both can be tuned to shoot extremely well in a 308 at 1000 yards with a slight edge in BC to the 20x and some folks saying they can get a better vertical from the 200H, though it's hard to tell for sure.
I haven't tested the 208 yet. [sarcasm]I've noted before that Capstone forgot to call me about the release of these last yr and I took delivery of 4000ea 200.20x bullets just before Christmas[/sarcasm] . On top of that I just got back the shipment of 500+ loaded rounds that I'd shipped to South Africa last fall for a trip that got cancelled this month. Add in the already cancelled matches this yr and I'm pretty well set for this yr and next.
That said, I do want to get these running, and I have some friends testing the 208s with F-TR rifles and they seem to be getting precision on the level of the 200.20x at velocities that we think of as the "low node" for the 200.20x(low-mid 2600s). I think it's going to work, and it will save the time pointing bullets.
Berger doesn't really point these in what we think of in the classic sense. They have figured out how to get the lead core up into the meplat so the cavity at the nose is gone and the meplats are uniform and smaller than traditional HP target bullets.
Would you happen to know what powder and freebore they are using with the 208s?
A couple observations on the design *not having shot them*, so take that for what it's worth. To me, the 208 looks more like an alternative to the 215 than a step up from the 200.20X. It's shorter than the 215, lighter, and has the same BC. That's a win on all levels.
Except it's really not. The BC of the new 208s is very close to the values for pointed 200.20Xs. Because the 200.20Xs and 215s are not pointed at the factory, whereas 208s are pointed, a straight-up comparison is not an apples-to-apples comparison in my opinion, regardless of the weight or external dimensions. Pointed 215s have a BC that is almost 5% higher than the 208s, pointed 200.20Xs have a BC very close to that of the 208s.
Although it will always depend to some extent on the shooter/reloader and their specific setup, the velocities routinely obtained for tuned loads by many F-TR shooters with 200.20Xs and 215s fall roughly about 100 fps apart with a typical 30" barrel length. The 208s are likely to tune in somewhere in between the two. If you compare the external ballistics of those three bullets using realistic velocities and the BCs for pointed bullets in tuned loads, there is not going to be a *huge* difference in windage between any of the three. Although it's great to have a variety of different .30 cal bullet choices from Berger in the 200 to 215 gr bullet range, it's unlikely that the deciding factor for most F-TR shooters would be a noticeable difference in wind deflection, as they're all going to be fairly close. In such a scenario, some other aspect of performance such as consistency, precision, or even a deep-seated hatred of pointing bulletsis more likely to be the deciding factor.
Except it isn't, not really. The BC of the new 208s is very close to the values for pointed 200.20Xs. Because the 200.20Xs and 215s are not pointed at the factory, whereas 208s are pointed, a straight-up comparison is not an apples-to-apples comparison in my opinion, regardless of the weight or external dimensions. Pointed 215s have a BC that is almost 5% higher than the 208s.
Although it will always depend to some extent on the shooter/reloader and their specific setup, the velocities routinely obtained for tuned loads by many F-TR shooters with 200.20Xs and 215s fall roughly about 100 fps apart with a typical 30" barrel length. The 208s are likely to tune in somewhere in between the two. If you compare the external ballistics of those three bullets using realistic velocities and the BCs for pointed bullets in tuned loads, there is not going to be a *huge* difference in windage between any of the three. Although it's great to have a variety of different .30 cal bullet choices from Berger in the 200 to 215 gr bullet range, it's unlikely that the deciding factor for most F-TR shooters would be a noticeable difference in wind deflection, as they're all going to be fairly close. In such a scenario, some other aspect of performance, perhaps less obvious than BC, such as consistency, precision, or even a deep-seated hatred of pointing bulletsis more likely to be the deciding factor.
We now have them in stock!
steve@mcgeestocks.com
Here's a little update on the 208 hybrid from my testing so far in one of my FTR chassis guns. Robin and i went out last Saturday to test on property he has access to. It's roughly 965-970 yards and he has a E-target. We got there just after daylight and the wind was already blowing but not too bad. It was fish tailing from behind while shooting. I fouled the barrel with several shots, once getting lined up i shot 20 for record. Without any wind flags or indicators i shot 197-8X just kinda chasing the spotter. The gun shot well considering the conditions and nothing to look at for indicators. After i shot the string Robin pulled out his .284 and did some testing as well. He setup and used his Kestrel and shot very well with it (i should have used it as well!). Once he was done shooting i grabbed my other FTR chassis gun that i shoot 200.20X bullets in and proceeded to shoot a string with it. I used the Kestrel this time and only shot when conditions were pretty consistent according to what it said. The score was 200-9X. I think both loads (208 hybrid and 20X) can win matches and are pretty similar accuracy wise. I'm still on the fence whether it's worth switching over to the 208 hybrid over the 200.20X bullet. I need to shoot a few matches in different wind conditions and compare. Well, that's my .02 so far from what i've seen. It's still about as clear as mud right now.......![]()