Many of you will have seen the video that Tim put together on The Fieldsports Channel on copper bullets. It was in two parts, shooting into water followed by a trial on deer with 15 professional stalkers around the country. The video was light on detail in it’s conclusions because they had a lot to pack into the film so I contacted Tim and asked for more information. He has kindly sent me all the shot data, and whilst he has asked that I do not share it in detail with anyone he has agreed to let me post a summary on SD for those who are interested in knowing more. This isn't my trial, it's Tim's. He has just shared the data to help answer some of the questions.
We have removed all of the neck and head shot deer from the data. The summary focusses only on deer which were chest shot only. These shots varied between lung, heart and shoulder. That left 135 deer shot. Calibres were .243, .264, ,277 and ,308. Chamberings were 243Win, 6.5x55, 6.5CM, 270Win, 308Win, 30-06. Bullet weights varied from 80gr to 170gr.
Of the 135 deer shot there was one failure where the deer ran, was lost and recovered the next day. The bullet had hit the shoulder bone and deflected upwards, away from vital organs. The bullet was a 90gr in 243. Range was 165m, TV was estimated at 2360 fps and TE at 1110 ftLbs. No conclusion was reached on this as a one off occurrence is not sufficient to reach a conclusion. Weird deflections happen with lead bullets from time to time and more testing would need to take place before any conclusions on that bullets effectiveness could reasonably be reached.
134 shots were successful, so 99.3%.
Ranges were from 20m to 267m.
Below is a summary of the data:
From a big picture point of view the conclusion was that at normal stalking ranges copper bullets work. It has however thrown up lots of questions on what the limitations of copper bullets are. How does their design alter their effectiveness? What is the max range/min TV of each design? Does a heavier bullet in a larger calibre with more energy expand and a lower TV than a light small calibre bullet?
Tim is planning another part to the test designed to help answer those questions. It will involve shooting all the bullets into water from 200m where we know they all work on deer to 500m, measuring expansion at each 100m. Combining this measured data with calculated terminal velocity and energy should start to give answers.
In the mean time the deer culling trial continues with more data coming in from the team so the 135 in the trial so far will grow and hopefully those bullets where we have a very low number of samples should get to a level where the data becomes more reliable.
It is work in progress rather than finished work, but in time we will hopefully learn more about the various copper offerings.
We have removed all of the neck and head shot deer from the data. The summary focusses only on deer which were chest shot only. These shots varied between lung, heart and shoulder. That left 135 deer shot. Calibres were .243, .264, ,277 and ,308. Chamberings were 243Win, 6.5x55, 6.5CM, 270Win, 308Win, 30-06. Bullet weights varied from 80gr to 170gr.
Of the 135 deer shot there was one failure where the deer ran, was lost and recovered the next day. The bullet had hit the shoulder bone and deflected upwards, away from vital organs. The bullet was a 90gr in 243. Range was 165m, TV was estimated at 2360 fps and TE at 1110 ftLbs. No conclusion was reached on this as a one off occurrence is not sufficient to reach a conclusion. Weird deflections happen with lead bullets from time to time and more testing would need to take place before any conclusions on that bullets effectiveness could reasonably be reached.
134 shots were successful, so 99.3%.
Ranges were from 20m to 267m.
Below is a summary of the data:
| Summary | ||||||||
| Sample size | Av weight | Av Range | Av Dist ran | Av TV | Min TV | Av TE | Min TE | |
| gr | m | m | ||||||
| Barnes LRX | 5 | 127 | 146 | 22 | 2520 | 2280 | 1790 | 1480 |
| Barnes TTSX | 31 | 138 | 104 | 22 | 2660 | 2520 | 2350 | 1720 |
| Federal Power Shok Copper | 3 | 85 | 106 | 27 | 2720 | 2560 | 1400 | 1240 |
| Geko Zero | 12 | 136 | 107 | 18 | 2520 | 2270 | 1920 | 1550 |
| Hornady GMX | 10 | 128 | 120 | 21 | 2570 | 2370 | 1760 | 1620 |
| Lapua Naturalis | 2 | 90 | 163 | N/A | 2360 | 2350 | 1125 | 1115 |
| RWS Evo Green | 10 | 93 | 115 | 24 | 2960 | 2750 | 1830 | 1550 |
| Sako Power Head 2 | 15 | 120 | 170 | 11 | 2440 | 2250 | 1590 | 1350 |
| Sako Power Head Blade | 22 | 165 | 108 | 17 | 2430 | 2320 | 2130 | 1940 |
| Sellier and Bellot Exergy | 3 | 146 | 80 | 20 | 2700 | 2450 | 1900 | 1750 |
| Sellier and Bellot Exergy Blue | 22 | 157 | 120 | 17 | 2520 | 2220 | 2320 | 1800 |
| Average | 135 | 126 | 122 | 19 | 2580 | 1830 | ||
| By Bullet weight | ||||||||
| Sample size | Av Range | Av Dist ran | ||||||
| Up to 99gr | 17 | 119 | 23 | |||||
| 100gr to 119gr | 2 | 165 | 25 | |||||
| 120gr to 139gr | 53 | 133 | 18 | |||||
| 140gr to 159gr | 21 | 87 | 20 | |||||
| Over 160gr | 42 | 115 | 17 | |||||
| By Range | ||||||||
| Sample size | Av Weight | Av Dist ran | ||||||
| Up to 100m | 41 | 139 | 17 | |||||
| 100m to 149m | 55 | 131 | 22 | |||||
| 150m to 199m | 23 | 125 | 15 | |||||
| Over 200m | 11 | 128 | 23 |
From a big picture point of view the conclusion was that at normal stalking ranges copper bullets work. It has however thrown up lots of questions on what the limitations of copper bullets are. How does their design alter their effectiveness? What is the max range/min TV of each design? Does a heavier bullet in a larger calibre with more energy expand and a lower TV than a light small calibre bullet?
Tim is planning another part to the test designed to help answer those questions. It will involve shooting all the bullets into water from 200m where we know they all work on deer to 500m, measuring expansion at each 100m. Combining this measured data with calculated terminal velocity and energy should start to give answers.
In the mean time the deer culling trial continues with more data coming in from the team so the 135 in the trial so far will grow and hopefully those bullets where we have a very low number of samples should get to a level where the data becomes more reliable.
It is work in progress rather than finished work, but in time we will hopefully learn more about the various copper offerings.
