Cheap .243’s

Never in two decades has anyone ever asked to see my ammunition. That includes on contracts that have stipulated non toxic be used. I’ve never heard of anyone having their bullet chronographed to see if it meets minimum velocities or energy. Every deer I’ve ever shot could have been shot with a subsonic load and nobody would have ever known about it. I can’t imagine the police will be patrolling woodlands looking for lead bullets after the ban.

I would imagine that accepting that, while the vast majority of people will just switch to non lead bullets, some people will stockpile lead bullets for after the ban will be the most practical way forward by the police. It’ll be a temporary problem with the majority of the risk gone.
 
This is true however there was a lot more options when it came to lead, with copper being longer bullets to get the weight to make them deer legal very few if any slow twist .243 will stabilise them. Therefore making them completely unethical if you want to make a guarantee clean shot.
Drive them faster. You need weight or speed to make energy.
 
This is true however there was a lot more options when it came to lead, with copper being longer bullets to get the weight to make them deer legal very few if any slow twist .243 will stabilise them. Therefore making them completely unethical if you want to make a guarantee clean shot.

I don’t agree that very few will stabilise, the vast majority of 243 non-lead ammo is intended for 1:10 barrels. My own has stabilised 80gr Hornady CX, Barnes TTSX and 85gr TSX.

Almost all, if not all, of the 80-85gr bullets are intended for 1:10. There’d be very little point in manufacturers making it if it didn’t, as only a few rifles are specced with a faster twist barrel outside of the semi-custom route.

The 90gr plus bullets will need 1:8, but I’m aware of few, if any, manufacturers who make factory 243 win ammo with those bullets.
 
I don’t agree that very few will stabilise, the vast majority of 243 non-lead ammo is intended for 1:10 barrels. My own has stabilised 80gr Hornady CX, Barnes TTSX and 85gr TSX.

Almost all, if not all, of the 80-85gr bullets are intended for 1:10. There’d be very little point in manufacturers making it if it didn’t, as only a few rifles are specced with a faster twist barrel outside of the semi-custom route.

The 90gr plus bullets will need 1:8, but I’m aware of few, if any, manufacturers who make factory 243 win ammo with those bullets.
A short stubby bullet helps with stability. Im using up lead but Id be interested to try those Peregrine VRG3 in 80 and 100g one day. The shape a BC doesn't matter for sensible ranges and woodland stalking.
 
Basically every RFD says no .243’s are getting sold and zero demand. Yet, every owner argues they’re here to stay… 😂

The market will dictate, not nostalgic current users

I’m going to forecast that in a couple of years the .243 will be what the .270 has been for the last 20, great, works, but commercially 6ft under
 
Basically every RFD says no .243’s are getting sold and zero demand. Yet, every owner argues they’re here to stay… 😂

The market will dictate, not nostalgic current users

I’m going to forecast that in a couple of years the .243 will be what the .270 has been for the last 20, great, works, but commercially 6ft under
Yeah I’d tend to agree John. I know a couple of guys who run gun shops and both are saying the same.
I think what might save the .243 though, is the fact variations take a long time to process.
So even if you wanted rid of your .243. The process will be so long that you may have to buy more rounds to shoot if you don’t have another deer rifle.
Then the market may create the demand and the suppliers will fill it with a decent .243 bullet.
This is all speculation, but if there is a cheap enough “nice rifle” I might risk it

Cheers Rob
 
Does anyone have feedback from Scottish firearms dealers regarding second hand trade in .22 centrefires (222, 223, 22-250 etc.) ? Exempt from the lead ban and useable of Scottish roe deer and fox.
I’d love to see England and Wales allow 22 cf for roe.
If the results are not great with the lead ban it would be a good idea to make 22-250 .223 legal for roe

Cheers Rob
 
Does anyone have feedback from Scottish firearms dealers regarding second hand trade in .22 centrefires (222, 223, 22-250 etc.) ? Exempt from the lead ban and useable of Scottish roe deer and fox.
Read the thread
A dealer has already commented on all the above
If you’re not a member of a range or can prove visits to an approved range, it will be hard to argue possession of banned ammunition. If one is, I suppose in theory possession of target ammo is allowed
It’s not being banned so it won’t be banned ammunition
 
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