I'm still waiting on my barrel, should be here between tomorrow and the next 2 weeks (they've had it 4 weeks now)
Obviously I can't speak to hunting loads from experience, but in Lyamns 48th edition, they show a picture of their 264 grian that was fired at 1750 fps into a hog about 80 yards away. They say the alloy was about 10 BHN which leads me to believe it was 20:1, especially looking at the picture of the recovered bullet in the manual. This is where I am headed to when my barrel gets here. I want to drive either a 20:1 bullet or a WW with 1.5% tin between 1700 qnd 2000 fps. This should be very doable. Even if the soft bullet leaves a little leading, so long as it is accurate, what does that matter? Once load development is over we are only talking 1 to 5 such bullets a year. But I am willing to bet that with a top grade lube (I am going to use FWFL, Felix World Famous Lube, a homemade recipe that is the equal to LBT Blue or Apache Blue, perhaps better) such velocities will be achievable even with a soft bullet, but it will require a bullet that fits the bore and groove diameter as well a being proper to the throat, so it might actually involve a custom mold. After seeing the Lee 250 and the Lyman 264, I have no problem investing in a custom mold for my 38-55 barrel if that is what it will take to make it shoot. Imagine if you would a 44 Magnum 265 grain bullet with a ballistic coefficient of .325 or greater, and that is what we are talking about, or in other terms a 30-30 shooting 250+ grain bullets. If you can't kill 'em with that.... :grin: