My kids wrecked antelope and deer with a .243 and 95 grain VLDs. I just looked at the ballistics of the load I made. Not as dismal as the Grendel fan makes it sound. mtmuleyCan't argue that
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My kids wrecked antelope and deer with a .243 and 95 grain VLDs. I just looked at the ballistics of the load I made. Not as dismal as the Grendel fan makes it sound. mtmuleyCan't argue that
I think the .243 is an outstanding caliber, wouldn't mind owning one myself.My kids wrecked antelope and deer with a .243 and 95 grain VLDs. I just looked at the ballistics of the load I made. Not as dismal as the Grendel fan makes it sound. mtmuley
I almost get the feeling you aren't trolling...Are you kidding me?
The 6.5 Grendel is 26 caliber compared to 24 in the .243
The .243 has 100 ft lbs more energy at the muzzle, which honestly isn’t even measurable when it comes to what it does to the animal it hits, but the 6.5 Grendel passes the .243 in energy around 300+ yards so I’d love to hear how a “6.5 Grendel will never be a .243”?
Make it make sense
You people have to stop believing the bs you read in these forums and just go get some real life experience instead because this comment is one of the most ridiculous things I’ve ever heard.
I’d bet money that you couldn’t give me a single area where the .243 is better than the 6.5 Grendel outside the little 100 ft lbs more energy at the muzzle but as I said the 6.5 Grendel passes the .243 around 300 yards.
You lost me at not considering energy an important metric. I don't think anyone can honestly say that a 6.5 grendel has better ballistics than a .243, but it's still a damn fine round for deer sized game, and easily found in an AR platform which, whether or not you like it, is desirable to manyI almost get the feeling you aren't trolling...
Drop, drift, and impact velocity are the factors I look at first when bench racing loads, and they all come out dramatically in favor of the 243. I don't consider energy an important metric, but assuming appropriate bullets and loads, the 243 starts with a meaningful advantage there too that grows (percentage wise) the farther you get from the muzzle.
A bullet that expands a bit requires more energy to penetrate deeper, I like the thought of a large wound channel that exits the body. But if the rounds you use consistently kill animals, who TF caresEnergy doesn’t kill. Bullets make wound channels.
Exactly. With any bullet, at a given impact velocity it will have a given amount of energy. However, the impact velocity is what will dictate how that bullet will behave, so that's what I look for.Energy doesn’t kill. Bullets make wound channels.
I have no issue with the 6.5 Grendel, but the sole advantage I see over the 243 is fitting into a small frame AR. I think the Grendel would kill just fine, but I'd shoot game significantly farther with a 243 all other things equal.You lost me at not considering energy an important metric. I don't think anyone can honestly say that a 6.5 grendel has better ballistics than a .243, but it's still a damn fine round for deer sized game, and easily found in an AR platform which, whether or not you like it, is desirable to many
I would as well, but for me the difference would be 350 yds with the 6 5 vs 400 yds with a .243.I have no issue with the 6.5 Grendel, but the sole advantage I see over the 243 is fitting into a small frame AR. I think the Grendel would kill just fine, but I'd shoot game significantly farther with a 243 all other things equal.
It requires more velocity not energy. At least nobody has mentioned “knock down power” yet!A bullet that expands a bit requires more energy to penetrate deeper, I like the thought of a large wound channel that exits the body. But if the rounds you use consistently kill animals, who TF cares
That's because everybody knows that 6.5mm has .5 more knockdown powers than 6mm.It requires more velocity not energy. At least nobody has mentioned “knock down power” yet!
But "Winchester" has more letters than "Grendel" so...That's because everybody knows that 6.5mm has .5 more knockdown powers than 6mm.