7mm-08 rem

BRoth82

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Question for you guys that shoot a 7mm-08. I only hunt whitetails and am looking for suggestions between 2 different rounds. Both group great out of my gun and shots will be under 300 yards, what one would you shoot and why?
Federal fusion 140 grain or Barnes ttsx 120 grain.
 
I have 2 right now, one shoots the 120 ttsx better than I’m capable of and the other likes 140 accubonds. I have a couple boxes of the new Nosler solid bases but haven’t tried them yet.

I shoot barnes in several rifles and the 120’s in the 7-08 and 130’s in the 308 seem to have the most immediate impact on animals of any I’ve shot.
 
I have 2 right now, one shoots the 120 ttsx better than I’m capable of and the other likes 140 accubonds. I have a couple boxes of the new Nosler solid bases but haven’t tried them yet.

I shoot barnes in several rifles and the 120’s in the 7-08 and 130’s in the 308 seem to have the most immediate impact on animals of any I’ve shot.
Accubond is one Hell of a bullet. mtmuley
 
In my experience Barnes work in 90% of rifles. Hammers work with 98%. No use for lead hunting bullets anymore. I wish options in shot shells made the choice this simple there.
 
I would think the 120's would bleed speed pretty quick, but if staying inside 300 yds should still have enough for expansion. I've pretty much gone lead free in hunting loads these days, so I'd give another vote for the TTSX's.
 
In my experience Barnes work in 90% of rifles. Hammers work with 98%. No use for lead hunting bullets anymore. I wish options in shot shells made the choice this simple there.
Lead free for conservation reasons?
 
Barnes accuracy doesn't knock me out in my model7 with 20" barrel. The old federal premium with Nosler partitions did but they don't make them anymore. 3/4" groups with them. I want to try Hornady Cxs next.
 
In my experience Barnes work in 90% of rifles. Hammers work with 98%. No use for lead hunting bullets anymore. I wish options in shot shells made the choice this simple there.
Do Hammers require high velocity to function well?
 
Do Hammers require high velocity to function well?
Monos in general should strike the animal at 2000fps for standard monos and 1800 fps for some of the slightly softer longer range mono options to ensure expansion.

I would view that as true for hammers (but more about “shedding petals” than expansion in their case), but the real positive feature of hammer is you get significantly faster muzzle velocity so keeping the speed up is easier - especially for short action rounds.
 
and food I feed my family, and it performs wonderfully - a win, win, win
I like shooting the stuff I hunt with too much ,- copper bullets even as components are $$$ or i am poor.

Have you found a reasonably priced mono?
 
I like shooting the stuff I hunt with too much ,- copper bullets even as components are $$$ or i am poor.

Have you found a reasonably priced mono?
It's been said before. In the grand scheme, the price of the bullet is really not a consideration. mtmuley
 
I like shooting the stuff I hunt with too much ,- copper bullets even as components are $$$ or i am poor.

Have you found a reasonably priced mono?
I use TTSX unless it doesn’t shoot and then I go to Hammers as the back up. Not sure what “budget” means. We spend more on gas station snack food on the drive out than we do ammo big game hunting. Would practice with cup & core if practice volume needed.
 
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