.223 foxing round

Tony Morgan

Well-Known Member
Intending to shop for a .223 for foxing. What round do people find effective, and what twist rate for the .223 should I be looking for? Thanks.
 
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.223 is the round and all loads are effective as long as they are not target rounds, it (5.56x45) is used to shoot people after all!

For foxing to 250 yards or so twist doesn't really come into play, although some will tell you a fast twist and longer heavier high BC bullets are better its nonsense, my 1:14 0.223 shoots foxes at 250 and a bit further with no problem its only if you want to stretch beyond 350+ that twist can come into it.

As for bullets / loads 40/50/55 gr soft point or tipped varmint type bullets are my preference, I home load 50 gr V-max to 3350 fps and they put everything down very well.
 
I've been buggering about with a few different home loads in my .222 but had been using up some factory 50gr Remington AccuTips for living things. They worked fine but were quite pedestrian. Shot my first fox with home loaded 40gr V-Max last week and it was very conclusive - only 140ish metres but straight down and no exit.

As others have said, if it's a varmint bullet and your rifle shoots them ok, it will probably work well. If you're reloading, however, you might find your choice is dictated more by the availability of components!
 
Twist rate! Both my 223s are 1-in-8". You will probably be advised to have a slower twist rate if you will be using lighter bullets, say 60gr and lighter. Not sure about copper bullets, though!
 
As mentioned by someone in another thread the other day, a fox hit with a varmint projectile like the 50gr Sierra BlitzKing or the 50gr Hornady V-Max is just a bag of jelly.

Cheers
 
The 223 is a cracking round and very versatile, I've only just really got going with mine as the build was finished during the start of lock down . Previously I used my 243 for just about everything . Not as hip as a 204 , but ammo and components are more readily available , not to say cheaper .


I'd consider a 1 in 9 , purely as a response to the push toward lead free ammo . It will stabilise the longer bullets . However , it may not like the lighter/shorter sub 50 grain bullets . If you're intent on using 40 grainers , slow twist .

In the end , it's your choice . Your intended bullet choice really dictates the twist .

FT
 
I run a 1 in 8 on my 223, and it shoots pretty much everything from 50gr upto 70 gr ish with no issues at all.
currently using factory load vmax either 53g or 55gr and it is so predictable bang flop every time.
I am getting geared up to try some non toxic through it very soon, so will be interested to see how that goes.
 
Yes, use 35 grn Hornady NTX lead free on fox in a 223, they shoot superbly out of a 1-9 Howa and out of a friends 1-12 Sako at 3600 fps.
They do the usual trick to a fox. Had a couple of runners (2 out of 40 ish), but down to bad placement rather than the round.
 
If factory, I use a Hornady 55 gr Vmax round. If I do my bit then the results are devastating.

If reloading, then I use a 53gr Vmax (mainly because they were all I could get back when they were S.5), but the results are identical.

That's shooting through a 1989 Steyr Mannlicher with a 1:9 twist
 
Yes, use 35 grn Hornady NTX lead free on fox in a 223, they shoot superbly out of a 1-9 Howa and out of a friends 1-12 Sako at 3600 fps.
They do the usual trick to a fox. Had a couple of runners (2 out of 40 ish), but down to bad placement rather than the round.

Cool and good to know as I am struggling to get GMX to stabilise
 
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