Firstly, having just joined this forum today, I'd like to say hello to all the like-minded people out there! My name is Lee and I live and operate a small pest control company here on the south coast of England. I've been shooting, hunting, fishing, reloading etc for the past 30-years and despite gaining an awful lot of knowledge and experiences over the years, I still have much to learn and learn something new each day! I'm fortunate enough to own around twenty firearms, but my "daily use" calibre's are .308 for deer and foxes, .22lr for the shooting of foxes in urban and built-up areas and a .45-70 which is mainly for fun and the odd deer or fox. One of the weapons that I use on occasion is my Thompson Centre Encore in .22 Hornet. I've used this little gun out to 150-yards for foxes and have head-shot a few hares with it too! Because this little carbine has been used for vermin control, I've not been too bothered about the damage that the rounds do when they strike their target. The main aim for my home-loads was accuracy and a humane kill. Therefore, when after much experimentation I found that my Encore shoots sub-1" groups with a 50-grain Speer TNT with 12.6 grains of Lil Gun behind it, that became my load of choice! The thing is, these zippy little bullets are great at knocking down (or blowing up) vermin, but it now want to use my .22 Hornet Encore for shooting "for the table". I'm looking to shoot mainly rabbits and really want to get away from the explosive TNT's and probably even a slower charge in case body-shots are required as opposed to just head-shots. The other thing is that I may start keeping some of the fox skins? Over here in the UK, we are a bit limited when it comes to .224 heads as most shooters use the heavier 55-grain plus bullets for use in their AR's. V-Max are pretty much the "norm" for the few people over here that use .22 Hornets, but these really arn't the answer to my problem. Lightweight FMJ's are no good for me as I need some expansion / mushrooming but without the fragmentation of the TNT's. Any help or advice would be much appreciated. Cheers, Lee.