I know that rifles like .243 are meant to be shoot flat hundreds of yards with spitzer bullets, but i tried the .243 100 grain Hornady Round Nose bullets in my 6mm Rem and found them interesting.
First, they are not really blunt and round nosed. They look more like spitzers with the tip cut off, and they do have a tapered ogive. Second, they do look like tough bullets, with the flat lead tip mostly protected, and the advertised Interlock ring.
I found a load that shoots 8 or 10 of them (slowly, with time between shots, because of the very thin barell) into 1" clusters. Interesting, the trajectory seems flat: my target is a 1.5" orange sticker (you all know those) and the bullets hit inside the sticker if i shoot at 50, 100, or 150 yards.
What boggles my mind, though, is that my load is slow, and yet i get this flat trajectory from this bullet with supposedly cannon ball like ballistics. Oddly, if i replace the 100 RN with 95 grain SST, and keep the rest of the load identical, the rifle will still shoot to the same point, the groups just seem to open to 1.5-2" inches.
I cannot drive these bullet fast; as soon as i add powder and speed them up, i loose accuracy and they end up looking like a shotgun pattern, and a bad one at that. My load probably hurls them at 2600-2700 fps (40.3 grains of IMR 4350).
I am not worried about long distance trajectory. I will not shoot past 200 yards. Most of my hunting is in woods, and i either see deer at 20-75 yards, or i don't. Furthermore, i often need to plot my shots between branches, through leafs, etc. What i would like to know is this: has anyone hunted deer or pigs or similar game with this bullet? Will they work when so slow? Are these slow expanding, fast expanding etc?
Does anyone have experience about how they behave when hitting bones, etc?
Yes, i know, for woods hunting i would do better with a 30-30 with round nosed bullets, or better yet, some 45 cal.
Thanks for your comments.