.243 velocity

The rule of thumb is 50fps per inch less barrel and unless you have a chronograph its guessing. The published manuals have tighter than saami spec barrels too. I tried to achieve 4400 fps with a 36 grn Barnes Varmint grenade in my CZ22-250 and I hit 3850 and that was it. My barrel was fairly well used at that point and had loaded the max charge shown in there manual number 4. I gave up and enjoyed shooting with the results I had. It is common for factory loads to not do what the box lists, be happy when they come close. Before handloading for all my needs the deer and pronghorn died just fine when I placed the shot with whatever factory ammo i had at the time.
That’s pretty poor, I was able to hit 4000 FPS with the 30 gr version out of a .223!
 
Yes. 150fps down on an an already fairly crap advertised velocity=poor performance. We also chronographed some 120gn Norma stuff and it was also terrible, 120gn doing 2550fps, barely 243 power. Read the terminal ballistics piece on 6.5x55 and you get the gist. It seems to be a hand loaders calibre only imo.
2550 with a 120 is plenty to kill a deer and the Nosler NBT is a soft bullet so will expand still. My buddy uses them in Grendel at that speed and the kill his fallow bucks just fine.

Hell they use .222 in NZ for reds!
 
2550 with a 120 is plenty to kill a deer and the Nosler NBT is a soft bullet so will expand still. My buddy uses them in Grendel at that speed and the kill his fallow bucks just fine.

Hell they use .222 in NZ for reds!

Yeah I know, but it’s a marginal round, especially for myself who shoots large woodland reds and sika in thick Sitka. Start pushing the range slightly and lose another several hundred fps and it’s really looking fairly anemic. If every bullet placed was perfect then we could all use a .222 for everything, but alas I think anyone who’s killing a few beasties makes a mess of it, and the extra ft lbs can bail you out slightly. The 6.5x55 has a slightly dodgy rep with pro stalkers for being a good gun to train your dog on, and the reason is crappy low velocity factory Ammo. Hand loaded it’s a different beast, powerful, flat shooting, hard hitting with minimal recoil.
 
How are barrels made faster or slower ?? I load my sako 22 250 to 3600fps and no fox has told me its too slow, but I load for accuracy not speed and I hope longer barrel life.
If a factory barrel is manufactured on the upper side of diameter tolerance then pressure is reduced and produces less speed. Nothing to do with home loading except one might find that loading manuals seem to quote higher speeds than achieved with such a barrel. Tight bore is the opposite as sometimes used in some 308 Palma/FTR barrels. Even Lothar Walther offers tight bore 308. Non CIP?
My guess is that rifles that claim tactical or police are somewhat better in barrel tolerance. Just a guess. I had two T3 CTR rifles that produced the same or within 3-4fps av of each other with the same box of factory ammo.
edi
 
Yeah I know, but it’s a marginal round, especially for myself who shoots large woodland reds and sika in thick Sitka. Start pushing the range slightly and lose another several hundred fps and it’s really looking fairly anemic. If every bullet placed was perfect then we could all use a .222 for everything, but alas I think anyone who’s killing a few beasties makes a mess of it, and the extra ft lbs can bail you out slightly. The 6.5x55 has a slightly dodgy rep with pro stalkers for being a good gun to train your dog on, and the reason is crappy low velocity factory Ammo. Hand loaded it’s a different beast, powerful, flat shooting, hard hitting with minimal recoil.
Don’t disagree on ft-lb buying margin for error but the Nosler ammo is loaded to modern pressures I believe.

I know the x55 fairly well as I’ve loaded for one for 6 years now and owned one slightly longer. It’s a great calibre and improved by home loading. needs a longer than fashionable barrel to take advantage of the case capacity and slower powders
 
To anybody who has just entered the fascinating world of deer stalking I would advice to forget any of the above, it could put some people off! The black-art of home-loading and load development is something to worry about when we get another lock-in and the weather is bad. I got a head-ache reading some of those numbers...
Don't worry about it, and just buy a standard 100 -ish Gr factory loaded Soft Point cartridge, and if you hit a deer in the right spot (your margin of error is around 4-6 inches...) it will be dead.
 
To anybody who has just entered the fascinating world of deer stalking I would advice to forget any of the above, it could put some people off! The black-art of home-loading and load development is something to worry about when we get another lock-in and the weather is bad. I got a head-ache reading some of those numbers...
Don't worry about it, and just buy a standard 100 -ish Gr factory loaded Soft Point cartridge, and if you hit a deer in the right spot (your margin of error is around 4-6 inches...) it will be dead.
Unless you are in Scotland and it’s a legal requirement. You would be better off with 80 to 95 grain bullets in the standard twist 243. There are plenty of suitable ones for deer that would likely give better accuracy.

Reloading is not a black art either try reading Richard Lee’s Modern Reloading a couple of times. So you have the process straight and you can load decent ammunition.
 
Yeah I know, but it’s a marginal round, especially for myself who shoots large woodland reds and sika in thick Sitka. Start pushing the range slightly and lose another several hundred fps and it’s really looking fairly anemic. If every bullet placed was perfect then we could all use a .222 for everything, but alas I think anyone who’s killing a few beasties makes a mess of it, and the extra ft lbs can bail you out slightly. The 6.5x55 has a slightly dodgy rep with pro stalkers for being a good gun to train your dog on, and the reason is crappy low velocity factory Ammo. Hand loaded it’s a different beast, powerful, flat shooting, hard hitting with minimal recoil.
At least European ammunition is loaded to CIP values. Which values are you thinking of hand loading to? Not sure if all US ammo is loaded to the lower SAAMI spec. I don't think the CIP values are the issue but more the issue that some European 6.5x55 ammo uses bullets to have enough penetration on Moose/Elch, this is of course completely wrong for Roe or our smaller deer. Yes, this creates great dog training ammo. Load to CIP with say ELDX bullets and the result is not much different to a 6.5CM with our deer. Pressure of the 6.5x55 to the highest standard (CIP) is only 3800 bar vs the 6.5CM at 4350 bar. Some difference. A slightly longer barrel could make up for lower pressure of the 6.5x55 I presume.
BTW I don't think the 6.5x55 should be used for Moose/Elch sized animals, just not enough gun.
edi
 
Never bothered to measure it in all honesty - even .25-06 will breeze right through a 200y fallow buck so as long as they're shooting accurately I'm happy.
 
At least European ammunition is loaded to CIP values. Which values are you thinking of hand loading to? Not sure if all US ammo is loaded to the lower SAAMI spec. I don't think the CIP values are the issue but more the issue that some European 6.5x55 ammo uses bullets to have enough penetration on Moose/Elch, this is of course completely wrong for Roe or our smaller deer. Yes, this creates great dog training ammo. Load to CIP with say ELDX bullets and the result is not much different to a 6.5CM with our deer. Pressure of the 6.5x55 to the highest standard (CIP) is only 3800 bar vs the 6.5CM at 4350 bar. Some difference. A slightly longer barrel could make up for lower pressure of the 6.5x55 I presume.
BTW I don't think the 6.5x55 should be used for Moose/Elch sized animals, just not enough gun.
edi

My friend srvet off here loads for me, in a custom sako with a 26” sassen tube. 100gn TTSX circa 3350 FPS seems to work rather well....
 
6.5x55 to the highest standard (CIP) is only 3800 bar vs the 6.5CM at 4350 bar. Some difference. A slightly longer barrel could make up for lower pressure of the 6.5x55 I presume.
BTW I don't think the 6.5x55 should be used for Moose/Elch sized animals, just not enough gun.
edi

Careful there @ejg , the internet doesn't like it when you talk about their beloved Swede in that way, it's supposed to be a long action Creedmoor Killer!

Wait till they say it beats the 6.5 PRC :lol: :rofl:
 
To anybody who has just entered the fascinating world of deer stalking I would advice to forget any of the above, it could put some people off! The black-art of home-loading and load development is something to worry about when we get another lock-in and the weather is bad. I got a head-ache reading some of those numbers...
Don't worry about it, and just buy a standard 100 -ish Gr factory loaded Soft Point cartridge, and if you hit a deer in the right spot (your margin of error is around 4-6 inches...) it will be dead.
Don’t get into home loading if there’s another lockdown as you need to be able to test your loads!
 
Careful there @ejg , the internet doesn't like it when you talk about their beloved Swede in that way, it's supposed to be a long action Creedmoor Killer!

Wait till they say it beats the 6.5 PRC :lol: :rofl:
I don’t think anyone claims it’s a creedmoor killer, loaded full pressure it matches, or slightly exceeds, the creedmoor (using published data not silly hot loads off the internet)




but don’t let facts get in the way of your blinkered opinion
 
The only factory ammo I found to be on the nose for velocity was sako factory in 6.5x55, albeit through my 26” barrel. I chronographed some hornardy super performance and it was 150fps slower than advertised which made sense as I got a lot of runners, again that’s through a long barrel!

I’m now on hand loads 😂😂
Probably not the bullet speed that accounted for your runners......
 
Probably not the bullet speed that accounted for your runners......

You don’t think so? What was the issue then? With tame factory loads in a loading notorious for runners, on large deer, that subsequently were replaced with hot-ish home loads that result in no runnners?

Do enlighten.
 
You don’t think so? What was the issue then? With tame factory loads in a loading notorious for runners, on large deer, that subsequently were replaced with hot-ish home loads that result in no runnners?

Do enlighten.
accuracey and shot placement is what kills, the 150fps you claim to have lost wouldn’t matter unless of course your shooting deer out past 500yds and I doubt that any way.
 
accuracey and shot placement is what kills, the 150fps you claim to have lost wouldn’t matter unless of course your shooting deer out past 500yds and I doubt that any way.
I suppose it is possible with some copper bullets. But unlikely with lead cup and core. They do tend to have a wide range of velocity they work at.
Definitely a case of putting the bullet in the right place.
An old farmer I used to help told me .22lr was all you needed for Roe. Just put it in the right place lad. Apparently the deer act was just an inconvenience in his thinking.
 
accuracey and shot placement is what kills, the 150fps you claim to have lost wouldn’t matter unless of course your shooting deer out past 500yds and I doubt that any way.

I have just shot a hind tonight that ran 10 yards with my new chosen home load. She went down hard snapping a gorse bush in half lol! Last year on factory, in almost the same place at a similar range I had one go nearly 150 yards. Both double lunged, unaware of my presence, and no major should bones struck. The 150fps is subtracted from an already fairly paltry 2750fps claimed by the manufacturer. And that’s through a 26” barrel, god knows what it’d be doing in a 21”!!!

The terminal ballistics article about the swede more eloquently portrays what I’m attempting to say.
 
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