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New hornady ELD-VT bullets

Just stumbled across this. I’ve been using hornady bullets exclusively for varmints through the years, this looks like a much needed step forward for varmint bullets!!

No bc values yet, but looks promising!

View attachment 1487122View attachment 1487123

Yes!!!

Way to go Hornady. I have a totally new respect for that company. They're doing a great job backfilling lost products the other companies have abandoned. Good for them.
 
Yes!!!

Way to go Hornady. I have a totally new respect for that company. They're doing a great job backfilling lost products the other companies have abandoned. Good for them.
agreed. hopefully this line is successful and we see some expansion upon it in the future. would love to see some heavier options, especially in the 22/6mm cal territory to capitalize on the horsepower of the 22/6mm creed type cartridges.
 
They talked about 7 or 7.5 twist for the 62grain 22 caliber bullet. That may work for the lower velocity cases, but I'd bet a steak dinner that the big 22's would make it go poof. A 22 Creedmoor would get that bullet into the 3700 fps range. With a 7 twist barrel that would be 385,000 + rpm. I would guess that a 8 twist would stabilize that bullet, but that would still be 333,000 rpm. Those are 'thin ice' numbers. My take away from that interview is that they took existing bullet profiles and made a lighter bullet by decreasing core weight. Time will tell.
 
They talked about 7 or 7.5 twist for the 62grain 22 caliber bullet. That may work for the lower velocity cases, but I'd bet a steak dinner that the big 22's would make it go poof. A 22 Creedmoor would get that bullet into the 3700 fps range. With a 7 twist barrel that would be 385,000 + rpm. I would guess that a 8 twist would stabilize that bullet, but that would still be 333,000 rpm. Those are 'thin ice' numbers. My take away from that interview is that they took existing bullet profiles and made a lighter bullet by decreasing core weight. Time will tell.

There's not a bullet made that you need a seven twist for a 22 Creedmoor It's completely inappropriate for that caliber. For the bullets being made today an 8 twist is as fast as you would need for any of the standard 22 Creedmoor loads and bullets
 
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They talked about 7 or 7.5 twist for the 62grain 22 caliber bullet. That may work for the lower velocity cases, but I'd bet a steak dinner that the big 22's would make it go poof. A 22 Creedmoor would get that bullet into the 3700 fps range. With a 7 twist barrel that would be 385,000 + rpm. I would guess that a 8 twist would stabilize that bullet, but that would still be 333,000 rpm. Those are 'thin ice' numbers. My take away from that interview is that they took existing bullet profiles and made a lighter bullet by decreasing core weight. Time will tell.
3,700 sounds incredibly mild for a 62 grain in a 22 creed. the new 80 grain eldx would be the best bet in the 22 creed
 
They talked about 7 or 7.5 twist for the 62grain 22 caliber bullet. That may work for the lower velocity cases, but I'd bet a steak dinner that the big 22's would make it go poof. A 22 Creedmoor would get that bullet into the 3700 fps range. With a 7 twist barrel that would be 385,000 + rpm. I would guess that a 8 twist would stabilize that bullet, but that would still be 333,000 rpm. Those are 'thin ice' numbers. My take away from that interview is that they took existing bullet profiles and made a lighter bullet by decreasing core weight. Time will tell.
i do believe you are correct now that you mention it about taking the existing bullets and decreasing the core weight. would definitely explain the funky bullet weights.
 
224 62 gr -- It appears "engineers" took the 73 gr eld m, removed 11 grs of lead of the top of the core. This shifted the weight rearward and most likely made the bullet more explosive. So less lead(cheaper especially by the million). Same machines, same jacket, less lead(air is free). Charge more for the "new" product that costs less to produce.

Heck of an idea.

Better than Berger,Nosler, or Sierra which haven't developed a new varmint bullet In about 30 years.
 

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