Good choice I shot plenty with the factory 35 Berger flat base hollow mpoint made by HSM,not one lost coyote. However I give Hornady factory 40 grain Vmax the number 1 spot,only due to it's high bc which helps in windy scenarios. Hornady by a hair, but your choice was excellent.I ended up using 27 gr of 8208xbr and 35 gr Bergers. I think there is a better load in the gun somewhere, but this will suffice for coyote season.
Especially Hornady's 40 grain V-max 0.275 BCUnless you shoot heavy bullets in a 22-250 a 204 will hold its own or beat a 22-250 in the wind
With factory ammo and off the shelf factory 22-250's with their slowwww 14tw barrels, yes.Unless you shoot heavy bullets in a 22-250 a 204 will hold its own or beat a 22-250 in the wind
The man knows his onions!If you go fast twist 204 and shoot 55 bergers the 204 still wins in the wind against the 53vmax
It does but it's very minimal. At 500 yds a 204 shooting the 55's vs 22-250 w/53Vmax there's only 3.3 inches drift difference but the 204 drops nearly 6 inches more. That's based on a 90° 10mph wind.If you go fast twist 204 and shoot 55 bergers the 204 still wins in the wind against the 53vmax
Exactly, and with a 1/10 twist in 204, you can shoot 24 to 45-grain effectively. The 22/250 is a great round, but I seldom use mine since getting the 204.If you go fast twist 204 and shoot 55 bergers the 204 still wins in the wind against the 53vmax
A couple of years ago I worked up a terrific load with Reloader 7 also. Worked great and accurate in a Browning X-Bolt 204 and a Savage 12FV. Didn't work out very well in my 204 AR though. Not enough gas to cycle the action I suppose, even suppressed.Several years back, I somehow ended up with a bunch of those 35 Bergers, some really great bullets. I tried them in two of my 20P A/R's, trying out a bunch of different powders, including 8208XBR, which did pretty good. The best, hands down was with either Reloader 7 or Accurate LT32 in both rifles with that bullet. I run 1-12" Hart tubes at 26". I was running these at 3,700 FPS in my rigs. I was able to get mid-single-digit SD's with both of those powders, along with excellent accuracy - averaging under 1/3" with both - with a few .200" 5-shot groups in there. If you happen to have either of those powders, might be worth a try next time you get the itch.
Yes - when setting up a rig for these light bullets, I always change out my mainspring in the A/R's for Wolff Reduced Power springs. Will almost always cure the short-stroke associated with not enough gas on those light weight loads. A lot of guys use adjustable gas blocks, but I found much easier to just pop a different spring in. Nothing to get out of adjustment or readjust when changing loads.A couple of years ago I worked up a terrific load with Reloader 7 also. Worked great and accurate in a Browning X-Bolt 204 and a Savage 12FV. Didn't work out very well in my 204 AR though. Not enough gas to cycle the action I suppose, even suppressed.
~23.3 gr Reloader 7 under 35 Bergers. I'm out of the Bergers now, but use the same load with the 32 gr BlitzKings. Similar results. (Sierra Reloading iPhone APP loading info).
FYI ... Was posting about it on another forum a couple years ago and had a ding bat moderator just sure I was going to blow up my rifle and myself.
It does but it's very minimal. At 500 yds a 204 shooting the 55's vs 22-250 w/53Vmax there's only 3.3 inches drift difference but the 204 drops nearly 6 inches more. That's based on a 90° 10mph wind.
The clear winner is the 62 ELD-VT because it pretty much walks all over anything in its weight class.
