5300 FPS, a mile a second.

I used to know a bloke who was having a rifle built in 5-35-SMc. He was chasing 5000-odd fps too.

My own suspicion is that his bones are lying in some field with his bolt through his forehead 🤣
I think its a big thing in USA to create wildcats capable of silly speeds, 5k being a target, my 4900 was an accident reloading using a rogue nosler custom case in a load of Remington brass.
 
Many moons ago I was shown a rifle by a gunsmith that he’d built just to see if he could, it was a 22-270, I recon that’d be shooting a little on the rapid side, anyone have one?
Triggermortis
 
I used to know a bloke who was having a rifle built in 5-35-SMc. He was chasing 5000-odd fps too.

My own suspicion is that his bones are lying in some field with his bolt through his forehead 🤣
That cartridge was designed to do it, I was offered one recently and very nearly bought it, but limited funds and the fact I’d likely have to get rid of my .223 AI to justify it swayed me.
 
So anyway,anyone care to guess how much deader a fox is when shot with a head traveling at 5000fps as opposed to one shot with one of my .222’s?
By my reckoning all you end up with is 2000fps of waste gunpowder, if I thought I needed a rifle capable of vaporising a fox I’d give up shooting them.
 
So anyway,anyone care to guess how much deader a fox is when shot with a head traveling at 5000fps as opposed to one shot with one of my .222’s?
By my reckoning all you end up with is 2000fps of waste gunpowder, if I thought I needed a rifle capable of vaporising a fox I’d give up shooting them.
I don't think it was really intended for foxing as we know it. It was more a varmint round for small, fast-moving quarry such as prairie dogs at greater ranges
 
sure i read somewhere that a bit over 5000 fps was the max possible with current propellants due to the expansion speed ?
 
Back
Top