I actually believe you might be missing something. There is a big difference between twist rate and expansion, and the 110 grain videos I've seen with 300 bo with 1:5 twist look devastating on hogs.
Shooting the 8.6 blackout at supersonic will obliterate the hog, IMO. Even the 300 blackout will destroy a good amount of meat if one is not careful with placement.
DISCLAIMER: I'm just an everyday Joe wanting to go hunting, not shooting competition.
Actually it is a bit different, it requires less velocity to expand. I am going to test my loads myself at the range to be certain.
I think you might be missing some data here. The twist actually helps stabilize the boat tail, the CX is a BT design. There are flat base also, but boat tails stabilize with faster twist.
FWIW, the CX retains it's weight better than the Barnes. The Barnes is more likely to shed a petal.
That could be a problem, but if you note above I mentioned I do not plan to hunt with subsonic, but I would use it for home defense.
I have only shot 220 grain SMKs with a 1:8 twist 10.5" barrel.
I can sum this up in one sentence. You’re wrong on almost all points.
There is no advantage to the boat tail until you’re past about 500 yards. The fast twist is closer to creating a problem with a boat tail than solving one
Jacketed bullets are no problem in a 1/5 twist, you have to pay attention to the spin rate. The saving grace of most 1/5 barrels is that they are short. Barrels over 8” will get up into velocities exceeding 350,000 rpm. That’s a problem. Stay under 2200 fps and many jacketed bullets will survive everything but a full auto mag dump. Double taps or one round a minute and you can just about shoot all day. It’s all about barrel temp and being smarter than the bullet.
As you move up in bullet weight, spin rates over 300,000 rpm are more difficult to achieve, so bullet failure is less of a problem.
I have shot thousands of 110 Varmageddons at 2300 fps in a 8” 1/5 twist. Only trouble was my wife shooting a carbine course. Bullets started failing halfway through the second magazine. Too many double taps in too short of time. About 40 rounds in less than 5 minutes. I have had a 1/5 twist since around 2016, they are nothing new.
The CX low expansion threshold might be a problem, the relationship between expanding and twist rate is that a bullet designed to expand at low velocities often does not have the tensile strength to open and twist through tissue without breaking off. It’s the rapid deceleration that is the problem. As I said, I haven’t worked with the bullet, simply because it will never be able to achieve the velocities I’m interested in at 110 grains. It’s a poor design for the cartridge.
There’s a reason Lehigh defense limits maximum velocity on some of their bullets to 1200 fps. They open up in flight in a 1/7. Lower in a 1/5. It’s not the forward speed, it’s the rotation.
The problem with a 1/3 twist is the bullet reaches 336,000 rpm at 1400 fps. the same rpm as a 1/5 at 2300.
In a 1/3 at 1050 fps the bullet will be spinning over 250,000 rpm. That’s hard on bullets and the hotter the barrel gets, the more likely the failure.
You can believe all the internet hype you want. Real life will be much different. The cartridge just does not have the energy to have a “devastating” effect on anything over about 200 pounds. I know people who have brought down hogs over 500 pounds. But for every one of those there are fifty people who lost a 100 pound whitetail because they thought they could shoot it in the ass and blow its brains out.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m a big fan of the cartridge, but a bigger fan of the truth. You’re setting yourself up for some disappointment.
I probably have sent a couple dozen bullets back to the manufacturers because they just wouldn’t perform as they hoped and were redesigned.
If you’re going to test a bullet, invest in some gel. Water and sand are a joke. You will also get the advantage of knowing how deep the bullet penetrates before it opens. This is a key piece of knowledge. A bullet can expand too soon.
I’m not picking on you exactly. But the kind of information you’re tossing out with absolutely no real experience, is what has given the cartridge a bad reputation.
I have pushed back against that for many years.
In the right hands, recognizing the limitations, it has its place. But when it takes 15+ rounds of supers to stop a 250 pound black bear that’s charging at you, you might change your opinion of its devastating stopping power. I’ve seen the photos of that one and talked to the shooters.
Thread drift off, I’m out unless there is a serious question.