They came yesterday... At first glance they are an awsome looking bullet. I am not a machinist nor a bullet maker but these things are made to look really good. They look like a perfect diamond - I mean really pretty.
I orderd three varieties... the 10 mil/200 grain, the .452/250 grain, and then I went off the deep end and ordered the .458/300 grain as that is the bullet I use for elk hunting.
The 10mil/200 is the one that has my attention more than than the other two. I am thinking if I were going to pay a premium price for a 10 mil bullet it might be this one vs. the SST/SW. OH yea! you all should know that I am not a pointy bullet fan when it comes to ML projectiles. 200 yards is my self imposed limit so I really do not need the pointy bullets. But back to the 10mil. One thing that I really think that will be an advantage is the two rings around the bullet. It should really help the slick brass projectile grip the sabot and prevent the sabot from spinning without turning the bullet, especially at the initial explosion.
I did not realize the the .452/250 had somewhat of a boat tail base - so I am not sure how that will shoot in a regular flat based sabot. Again I do like the ideal of the rings.
The .458 is a huge bullet - physically much larger than I expected, in fact it is to large to use during our ML season as we have the 2x bore diameter rule, but during regular rifle season it would be available since I do not use a regular rifle any more at all.
Why did I get these? I think Grouse already proved they can be shot accurately, but nobody knows how well they will work on big game. My plan is to shoot them in to my torture medium @ 100 yards and dig them out to see what they look like. I have example of recovered Noslers, Speers, and Hornadys that I can compare them with.
If you look at the nose of these you can see on the outside there are no cuts to aid in the formation of petals as expansion first begins. This really concerned me, but if you look in the nose there are six flat surfaces with a small groove separating each flat surface - so I assume this is the apparatus that starts the formation of petals. To invision what I am talking about it looks like you could insert the correct size of allen wrench riht in the nose and turn the bullet.
Here is a picture that shows the Lehighs as compared to more common bullets.
Gotta love experimenting during the non-hunting season