243 for foxing when copper comes in?

While there are (currently) no light for caliber monometal offerings for 243, there are stuff like the Varmint Grenades (mentioned) and Ballistic Tip Lead Free (55gr 0.288 G1 BC).

Challenge might be to find middle weight all-purpose bullet. People currently using them (lead cored) seem to have deviated to designs that disintegrate quite fast and thoroughly.

Monometal that expands and in some cases sheds the petals, is going to act differently. And there doesn't seem to be these powdered core disintegrating non-lead bullets in this weight category (yet).
 
Beg to differ
1 fallow pricket at 50p a kg = £20
1 fox that doesn’t eat x amount of poults or x amount of lambs is much better value!
I, like the large majority, don't get paid to shoot fox's. Therefore, yes, they ain't worth it 😂

Edit to add - if youre getting 50p per kg on fallow, have you considered butchering them yourself? I'd be feeding it to the dogs rather than 50p per kg!
 
I, like the large majority, don't get paid to shoot fox's. Therefore, yes, they ain't worth it 😂

Edit to add - if youre getting 50p per kg on fallow, have you considered butchering them yourself? I'd be feeding it to the dogs rather than 50p per kg!
I’d love to be able to, but I’d be looking. At butchering around 120 a year
 
I believe this bullet
Those of you that, at present are using a 243 for foxing, will you continue to use it with copper ammo?
Or, will you go to something else like a 22.250 or 204 where lead will still be allowed?
I believe this is exactly what you are looking for.


Suitable for use in all lead-free zones or shooting ranges that require non-magnetic bullets, the Ballistic Tip Lead-Free™ (BTLF) bullet is everything that varmint and predator hunters expect from a Ballistic Tip®, in a lead-free design. At the heart of the BTLF bullet is Nosler’s exclusive Fragmenting Copper Core Technology™, which when initiated by its metallic-colored polymer tip (color coded by caliber) upon impact, exhibits rapid expansion for absolute displacement of the target. The ultra-thin copper jacket and flat base design assures structural integrity in flight and bench-rest accuracy at ultra-high velocities. Engineered for the same quality and performance that the Ballistic Tip® has made famous for over 25 years, the BTLF bullet, combines immediate and complete fragmentation with match grade accuracy for the ultimate lead-free varmint bullet.


I am using the same bullet in 223/53gr. It is very acurate. I shot approximately 20 foxes whit it and all of them fell at spot.

I would saj that it is basically non-lead version of V-max or Nosler Varmageddon lead bullets.

I wouldn't shoot anything other than predators with it.
Damage to meat is probably significant and there might be no exit at larger animals.
 
I am using the same bullet in 223/53gr. It is very acurate. I shot approximately 20 foxes whit it and all of them fell at spot.
Do you mean 50gr BT Lead Free or something like 53gr Varmageddon Tipped (that has lead core)?

Few years ago I moved from 40gr Varmageddon Tipped to 53gr, to get some extra penetration since raccoon dogs and occasional badger are more heavily built / have extra body fat compared to fox. There's basically no downside to replace 40gr varmint bullets with 53gr Varmageddon or V-Max in 223, and even less so in faster 22cal as long as you can stabilize them.
 
Do you mean 50gr BT Lead Free or something like 53gr Varmageddon Tipped (that has lead core)?

Few years ago I moved from 40gr Varmageddon Tipped to 53gr, to get some extra penetration since raccoon dogs and occasional badger are more heavily built / have extra body fat compared to fox. There's basically no downside to replace 40gr varmint bullets with 53gr Varmageddon or V-Max in 223, and even less so in faster 22cal as long as you can stabilize them.
Yes, my mistake.
Somehow I forgot, that BTLF in .224 is 50gr.


This is the one.

Cheers
 
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