222Jim
Silver $$ Contributor
I'm trying to figure out which .224 cal. varmint bullets have tangent ogives and which have secant ogives.
Specifically, in the 40 to 60 grain range of .224 bullets from the (a) Berger Varmint, (b) Hornady V-Max, (c) Nosler VArmageddon, and (d) Sierra BlitzKIng product lines, which have tangent ogives and which have secant ogives.
I've looked at each under a magnifying glass, and have come close to convincing myself that Hornady V-Max are secant and the rest are tangent, but would love to find an external reference to confirm or refute my unscientific observation!
Why do I care? As a retired engineer with time on my hands, I'm trying to better understand some seating depth consistency and precision trends I'm seeing with my .222 Remington and .22-250 Remington.
Specifically, in the 40 to 60 grain range of .224 bullets from the (a) Berger Varmint, (b) Hornady V-Max, (c) Nosler VArmageddon, and (d) Sierra BlitzKIng product lines, which have tangent ogives and which have secant ogives.
I've looked at each under a magnifying glass, and have come close to convincing myself that Hornady V-Max are secant and the rest are tangent, but would love to find an external reference to confirm or refute my unscientific observation!
Why do I care? As a retired engineer with time on my hands, I'm trying to better understand some seating depth consistency and precision trends I'm seeing with my .222 Remington and .22-250 Remington.