Florida Wally
Gold $$ Contributor
Has anyone tried with any success shooting 175 SMK’s with a .170 freebore .308?
Single shot, so not mag restricted. Setting up rifle to shoot 200-20x bergers. I also have a bunch of 175 SMK’s and wonder if they will shoot.
I have noticed the difference in BTO in the older SMK’s. I once had a box of 500 with a 0.012 ES. Drove me crazy trying to get a constant CBTO when seating. I have also noticed that lately the BTO ES is 0.002 to 0.003. Glad to hear they are jump tolerant.They almost certainly will shoot well, although you may need to do a sort and batch job with a comparator on the BTO measurement. (Recent SMKs are excellent in this respect; older ones not so good.) The blunt 7-calibre radius nose on this design and R/tR value of 1.00 (perfect tangent form) make this a very, very tolerant bullet as to chamber form and jump-size.
The problem is that the short low-radius nose creates a LOT of drag compared to a good modern long-range bullet, so it loses speed rapidly down-range and is more wind-affected. Comparing the 200.20X and 175 SMK gives G7 BCs of 0.328 v 0.243. As they're different weights which affects final BC value, a better metric is the 'form-factor' which compares how much in-flight drag they generate compared to the G7 'reference projectile'. The 200.20X tests out at 0.919; the 175 SMK 1.085. the reference projectile is always given a value of 1.000, so the Berger produces c. 8% less drag in flight; the Sierra produces getting on for 1% more.
A lot depends on the distances you intend to shoot over. The 175 Sierra will shoot to 1,000 and beyond, but is getting pretty slow usually. To stay above 1.2 MACH (c. 1,350 fps) which is roughly the upper figure for the transsonic speed zone, you need an MV of around 3,025 fps under standard ballistic conditions (59F 29.92 inches mercury pressure). Each 1 mph crosswind change moves the bullet nearly 9 inches so getting for 1-MOA per mph wind change. The 200.20X at 2,650 fps MV is travelling around 100 fps faster at 1,000 (1,450 fps) and moves a shade over 7-inches per 1 mph crosswind change.
Figures from Bryan Litz's Ballistic Performance of Rifle Bullets 3rd ed., and Berger online ballistics calculator function.