When i read some of your discussions here on this site, you have the same discussions we had here some years ago. It was announced 7 years ago the lead ban would come and at start there was a lot of discussions.
Now we have several years of experince in lead fre rifle ammo and almost 30 years of lead fre shotgun ammo experience.
14 years ago we where forced to use lead free only on hunts in German state forests. For that reason i mainly used 165gr Hornady GMX in my old 30-06 Krico, since i got it 5 years ago. Before that i used Barnes 250gr TSX in Sauer 202 9,3x62 with good results.
Now however we have 100% ban on lead for all kind of hunting here i Denmark. For shotguns they banned lead back in 1996, and now they also banned it for rifels.
I just kept on using my Hornadys in 30-06 when lead ban came here, even when the accuraty was nort the best.
Now the Hornadys are becoming hard to get so i decided to switch.
As a handloader i went to the gunshpop and bought a testpack (8 bullets of all types they sell) lead free hunting bullets in caliber .30.
They have these testpacks in most shops as experience shows how much difference there are in what bullets the rifles like, and noone can tell without test shooting.
Here is the results: all shots fired from the testbech at the 100meter range in Vingsted sport shooting range.
Electronic target system tells the spread, if its not to bad
165gr Hornady GMX, my old ammo, was ok for driven hunts and up to around 100 meters, but not great 5 centimeter spread.
150gr and 165gr Barens TTSX, really bad, problem keeping them inside black electronic marking zone of 15centimeters.
165gr TSX same as the TTSX.
Lapua Naturalis 170gr, bad 6,8 centimeters.
RWS Evolution Green, perfect keeping 4 shots within 2cm.
SAKO 120gr Powerhead Blade, really bad 4 shots spread over 10 centimeters.
SAKO 170gr Powerhead Blade, OK 3,5 centimeters.
Nosler 168 and 180gr E-tip. OK both types stay within 4 centimeter.
FOX Classic. 150 and 165gr. Perfect, stay within the 2.2 centimeter.
DK bullets 130, 150 and 180gr, really bad some went of the electronic black zone.
My old BSA CF2 Stuztsen cal .308, i always use 165gr Barnes TTSX, and it shoots relly well with those, dont know what it would say to the other types.
I also have a CZ 527 BRNO FOX i bought from new 1987, caliber .222, and thats a fuzzy old lady. Only bullet it likes is 50gr Barns TSX, if I try 50gr TTSX it spred them out like cowdung on a big field.
Brother in Law, use 30-06 in his Blaser R93, it dosent like Barnes, but shoots SAKO 170gr Blade factory ammo well, he never tried anything else.
He got a .243 barrel for it, and so far we have not been able to find a lead free bullet that barrel likes.
My friends Blaser R93 .308 shoots really bad with SAKO 170Gr Blade, but that rifle love 180gr DK bullets and 165gr Barnes TTSX.
His brother had a lot of trouble with his Browning Maral, they ended up doing the same as I did with a testpack, and his rifle ONLY liked FOX classic. All other bullets where really bad in that rifle.
My old man shoots a SAKO 85 Bavarian, and so far he only tried Sako Blade 170gr and 165gr TTSX, and it likes them both.
So that was a little practical experience with lead free hunting ammo.
The rumor say, bigger bores have it easyer with lead free bullets, dont know if it is just a tale.
The most popular caliber here right now is .308 Win, and 9,3x62 is on solid 2 place, good old Scandinavian 6,5x55 has been pressed back on number 3.
30 years ago 6,5x55 would probably have been number 1, 308 number 2, and 30-06 number 3.
Now we have several years of experince in lead fre rifle ammo and almost 30 years of lead fre shotgun ammo experience.
14 years ago we where forced to use lead free only on hunts in German state forests. For that reason i mainly used 165gr Hornady GMX in my old 30-06 Krico, since i got it 5 years ago. Before that i used Barnes 250gr TSX in Sauer 202 9,3x62 with good results.
Now however we have 100% ban on lead for all kind of hunting here i Denmark. For shotguns they banned lead back in 1996, and now they also banned it for rifels.
I just kept on using my Hornadys in 30-06 when lead ban came here, even when the accuraty was nort the best.
Now the Hornadys are becoming hard to get so i decided to switch.
As a handloader i went to the gunshpop and bought a testpack (8 bullets of all types they sell) lead free hunting bullets in caliber .30.
They have these testpacks in most shops as experience shows how much difference there are in what bullets the rifles like, and noone can tell without test shooting.
Here is the results: all shots fired from the testbech at the 100meter range in Vingsted sport shooting range.
Electronic target system tells the spread, if its not to bad
165gr Hornady GMX, my old ammo, was ok for driven hunts and up to around 100 meters, but not great 5 centimeter spread.
150gr and 165gr Barens TTSX, really bad, problem keeping them inside black electronic marking zone of 15centimeters.
165gr TSX same as the TTSX.
Lapua Naturalis 170gr, bad 6,8 centimeters.
RWS Evolution Green, perfect keeping 4 shots within 2cm.
SAKO 120gr Powerhead Blade, really bad 4 shots spread over 10 centimeters.
SAKO 170gr Powerhead Blade, OK 3,5 centimeters.
Nosler 168 and 180gr E-tip. OK both types stay within 4 centimeter.
FOX Classic. 150 and 165gr. Perfect, stay within the 2.2 centimeter.
DK bullets 130, 150 and 180gr, really bad some went of the electronic black zone.
My old BSA CF2 Stuztsen cal .308, i always use 165gr Barnes TTSX, and it shoots relly well with those, dont know what it would say to the other types.
I also have a CZ 527 BRNO FOX i bought from new 1987, caliber .222, and thats a fuzzy old lady. Only bullet it likes is 50gr Barns TSX, if I try 50gr TTSX it spred them out like cowdung on a big field.
Brother in Law, use 30-06 in his Blaser R93, it dosent like Barnes, but shoots SAKO 170gr Blade factory ammo well, he never tried anything else.
He got a .243 barrel for it, and so far we have not been able to find a lead free bullet that barrel likes.
My friends Blaser R93 .308 shoots really bad with SAKO 170Gr Blade, but that rifle love 180gr DK bullets and 165gr Barnes TTSX.
His brother had a lot of trouble with his Browning Maral, they ended up doing the same as I did with a testpack, and his rifle ONLY liked FOX classic. All other bullets where really bad in that rifle.
My old man shoots a SAKO 85 Bavarian, and so far he only tried Sako Blade 170gr and 165gr TTSX, and it likes them both.
So that was a little practical experience with lead free hunting ammo.
The rumor say, bigger bores have it easyer with lead free bullets, dont know if it is just a tale.
The most popular caliber here right now is .308 Win, and 9,3x62 is on solid 2 place, good old Scandinavian 6,5x55 has been pressed back on number 3.
30 years ago 6,5x55 would probably have been number 1, 308 number 2, and 30-06 number 3.