SSL
Gold $$ Contributor
My long-time .223 load for groundhogs and coyotes has been 50-grain VMax or 52-grain HPBT bullets (both shoot under .5" in my rifle). Now that I have a rifle with a 1-8" twist, I decided to try heavier bullets out of curiosity. Surprisingly, the Hornady 68-grain HPBT Match bullets shoot every bit as well as my former stand byes with the first load I tried without any load development. The idea of the heavier bullets is both logical and intriguing in my area where the coyotes grow very heavy coats, are mostly of a good size and the wind never seems to stop. My .22-250 is a 1-14" twist and accuracy is out the window with anything over 55 grains, and my .243 is just a bit too heavy to want to pack very far. Like Goldilocks, the .223 is just right.
My question is: Though mostly thought of as a target bullet, has anyone used the Hornady 68-grain HPBTs on coyotes and how were the the results? Is the jacket too thin and blows up or is it too thick and merely drills a small hole through?
My question is: Though mostly thought of as a target bullet, has anyone used the Hornady 68-grain HPBTs on coyotes and how were the the results? Is the jacket too thin and blows up or is it too thick and merely drills a small hole through?