6.5x47 load data

hi paul

this is my load data for starts as this what I have purchased with the rifle, barring the primers,



Hi bob.

I ran the numbers with vvn140 my load is as follows
cci 450m primer
nosler 120bt oal @ 2.67 (in my rifle 30 thou from lands perfect feed from mag)
lap brass h20 capacity is 49.1
36.7 grns vvn140
vocity was 2748fps accuracy was in the .3s for 5 shots
I hit several accuracy nodes but settled on this but even unstable nodes where below 1 moa accuracy.

your h20 capacity and primers may differ but start at 34 grains and work up you will find a max around 38 grains of n140 but careful mate with this case pressure signs go from subtle to popped primers in no time.

Let us us know how you get on bob I got faster velocities with other powders but there is somthing about this bullet at this speed at sub 300 yards that just pole axes deer with minimum damage.

I'm running 39.1g of R15 with a Nos 120BT and getting inside 0.5 MOA (bipod prone) at 2960 fps and ES of 13. However, the damage to Roe and Muntjac is significant with the bullet at that speed. Interesting to see that Bob is finding them much more acceptable running a little slower. I find the 100 TTSX at 3250 fps cause much less damage than the 120BT's and most drop to the shot. The Barnes are just as accurate.
 
I've been using 38.4 grains of varget with 123 grain amax in my 47 which I've owned around two months in which time I've shot neck end of 20 lowland reds both stags and hinds the last one were five hinds in less than 30 seconds at just under 200yards non of which ran more than 30 yards with the biggest going 153 lbs on the hook
ive found the 47 a fantastic round for U.K. Deer
 
I've been using 38.4 grains of varget with 123 grain amax in my 47 which I've owned around two months in which time I've shot neck end of 20 lowland reds both stags and hinds the last one were five hinds in less than 30 seconds at just under 200yards non of which ran more than 30 yards with the biggest going 153 lbs on the hook
ive found the 47 a fantastic round for U.K. Deer

that sounds great swatty,

im going to use the load above that has been done for me, so i will have to see how it shoots,

bob
 
all good lads

very happy, been loading some tonight and then a couple of hours on ham radio, cup of tea and then on here for an hour,

bob
 
I've not shot or loaded a 6.5x47 but I have shot my conservatively loaded 6.5x55 at a range of deer with a range of bullets.

I found 120gr BT at 2,800fps great on everything. Didn't suffer innapropriate carcass damage. When I stalked stags I moves to a 125gr partition at the same speed which was fantastic. I shot my stag at 275yards and bullet performance was great. I've shot fallow and muntjac with it. It would be my choice for a roe/red bullet.

I used N550 in my 6.5 and noticed appreciable roughening of the throat after approx. 300-400 rounds . In that expensive custom barrel I've moved to single base powders. I still burn maximum amounts of N550 and RL17 in my cheap Remington factory barrels and wouldn't you know it they don't wear.
 
be nice to see your outcome mty ,I my nos 120 bt hunting bullets not the (varmint bullets) info data some place i'll dig it out :tiphat:
 
This is a calibre I'm swaying towards a rebarrel on my 243 once funds and time allow. How/why have most settled on the 120ish grain bullets rather than the 140s? Is it terminal performance, speed, accuracy that makes you choose the lighter bullets?
 
This is a calibre I'm swaying towards a rebarrel on my 243 once funds and time allow. How/why have most settled on the 120ish grain bullets rather than the 140s? Is it terminal performance, speed, accuracy that makes you choose the lighter bullets?


Because it was developed to break records shooting a 123gn bullet at 300y. Thats where it performs yhe best. If you want to shoot 140's, there are better choices
 
Because it was developed to break records shooting a 123gn bullet at 300y. Thats where it performs yhe best. If you want to shoot 140's, there are better choices

Yes but that's all.about accuracy at 300 yards and people on this thread are using it for hunting mainly. So if you're happy for accuracy to drop by a fraction of an inch would the 140s be a better bet for larger deer withing 300 yards? Or even smaller deer as the damage may be less with a slower heavier bullet?
 
Yes but that's all.about accuracy at 300 yards and people on this thread are using it for hunting mainly. So if you're happy for accuracy to drop by a fraction of an inch would the 140s be a better bet for larger deer withing 300 yards? Or even smaller deer as the damage may be less with a slower heavier bullet?

In my opinion the 6.5 Lapua is not a good 300 yd Red deer round with a 120 grain bullet, I'm not sure it is with a 140 grain either. It's perfectly good out to 200 yds, even 250, but I now always take the 7mm when going to the hill and keep the 6.5 for everything up to Fallow. Have just found it to be more effective and humane.
 
well i am not going to be shooting much past 200 in real life so i am not to worried, but what i don't need is the thread turning into a willie waving contest,

cheers

bob.
 
No willy waving involved Bob, just telling you what I have found. I would just rather take something a bit bigger with me if going after Stags on the hill. You did ask for opinions!
 
Yes but that's all.about accuracy at 300 yards and people on this thread are using it for hunting mainly. So if you're happy for accuracy to drop by a fraction of an inch would the 140s be a better bet for larger deer withing 300 yards? Or even smaller deer as the damage may be less with a slower heavier bullet?

the type of people that choose the 47 are generally looking to extract the best from it, accuracy, low recoil, long brass life etc, this is at its best with 123 gn bullets. If they wanted to shoot 140's they would have chosen the 260 or now the creedmoor. Ive shot a 47 since 2012, i shoot a winmag when im wanting to drop larger deer more quickly. Red deer on the hill will not make it to cover or the boundary with a 120gn bullet in them. In woodland, i'd pick up a bigger gun. I didnt suggest the 47 was good for killing deer deer at 300y, simply that it was yhe most accurate at 300y. Ive never used a gun that was accurate at 300y that wasnt accurate at 100y..
 
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Sorry to drag up this old thread. Bob, did you ever write up your results with the 120 grain NBT and N140 in your 6.5x47 on the forum?
 
I have moved on in my thinking on the 6.5 Lapua in the past couple of years. The 129 ABLR allows me to stretch out to 300m and still retain 1500 ft.Lb of energy. It's plenty for anything in the UK at that range. RL15 is the magic powder with CCI450 primers. Terminal performance of the bullet is excellent.
 
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