Coincidentally, I was extracting the key dimensions of 120-130gn 6.5mm match bullets from Bryan Litz's book
Ballistic Performance of Rifle Bullets 3rd edition, albeit in my case with 6.5 Grendel more in mind. (I do have a 260 Rem competition rifle, but like
@284winner's it's throated long so I primarily use 140gn bullets in it.)
I do have 100 130gn ELD-Ms to try (alongside 123s), but Bryan L's stats don't look too promising for the 130gn version. Here's what Bryan found in his long-range range testing as average i7 ('form factor') values for the lower drag bullets in this weight category in high to low order (ie poorest to best):
130gn ELD-M .................. 1.079
130gn Sierra TMK ............ 0.977
123gn ELD-M .................. 0.974
123gn Scenar .................. 0.950
123gn Sierra MK* ............ 0.928
130gn Berger OTM Tac ..... 0.924
I've used the average 'form factor' value as we have two bullet weights in the list, the 130 models' higher sectional density boosting the resulting BC when combined with form factor. Form factor is a drag based comparison against the reference projectile, the G7 model here. As in all such ballistics systems using a reference base, the reference is given a value of 1.000 and the others produce less drag (and a higher BC all other things being equal) if they have a value below 1 and more drag if above. So, in this group, the 130gn ELD-M generates nearly 8% higher drag than the G7 reference and at the other extreme, the 123gn SMK and 130gn Berger OTM Tactical between 7 and 8% less across a range of speeds in a long-range flight.
The other thing I don't like about the 130gn ELD is that it is closer to being a secant ogive type than the others, Bryan giving it an Rt/R value of 0.67 (0.50 = classic VLD form; 1.00 = true tangent). The other models all have higher values for this metric between 0.72 (123gn SMK) and 0.94 (123 Scenar). The more efficient 123 ELD-M is in between at a reasonably high 0.86 and the 130 Berger is of course a hybrid ogive so doesn't have this metric, but is supposed to behave as a tangent form in the bullet jump / 'tuning' aspect.
However if the 130gn ELD-M shoots 'better' (ie produces smaller groups) than the others in my Grendel, I'll forgive it all its 'faults' and probably use it. Right now I'm shooting Lapua's 120gn Scenar, another relatively high-drag model (1.018), but which the barrel likes more than the others I tried initially.
* The 123gn Sierra MK values quoted are for the reintroduced model in the new pattern box and with factory meplat pointing. 'Pointing' aside, Sierra has changed the design in all respects apart from tail section angle and length, so it is actually a new bullet with a lower form factor and higher BC than the old model (green box). This has implications for seating depths / COALs as the ogive has moved in relation to the base, so those with both types (like me) have to redo the COALs for the new version.