Martineta, I have it on an ar15.
I actually had a 1 in 8 upper at one time, but it did not seem to shoot as well as the one in ten. I found I was not using it, so I traded it for a pistol (I am finding that I am not using the pistol either....wish I had kept the 1 in
. I have been shooting the whisper/300-221 for five or six years. Started out building the rifle for my daughter who was seven at the time. Turned out she was afraid of the noise, but since I had the rifle, I put it to good use. I have hunted with it several years, and it has been wonderful. Little noise, no kick to speak of, and I am not sure how dead the deer are supposed to be, but it seems to kill them dead enough. All of this has been with the 125 grain bullets with 17.5 gr of H110 at around 1850 fps , which seems to be the max in my rifle. Any more powder and I start to blow primers and ruin the brass.
As I mentioned since I got the can, I found renewed interest in heavy bullets. I started playing around with a bunch of different loads and bullet weights. I test fired them and of course the heavy bullets were starting to tumble at 25 or fifty yards, but I did not check the fps. Last time out I did set the chrono up and found some 180 grains that seemed to behave. I have found that my rifle likes 8.7 grains of Lilgun with the 180 grain bullets, pushing them at 1015 fps. That was what got me wondering why, at around 1000fps, a 180gr bullet would be more stable than a 220 grain bullet, when both would be spinning at the same rate.
In any case, it seems you have some experience with shooting the heavy bullets at animals, so if you would not mind sharing your experience, it would help me. Running the OGW calculator, I get 150 lbs for the 125 at 1850, but only 50 lbs for the 180 at 1015. That had me a little leery of shooting any animals with the heavy bullets, so your real life experience would be helpful.