Leupold BX-4 Rangefinding Binoculars

One gun to do it all .25 sst (Sherman short tactical)

That with the 131gr Blackjack?
I'm assuming 100 yards.

Couple of guys i shoot benchrest with have commented that closer than 400 yards, the Blackjacks don't do that great.
Start stretching the distance though, and it's another story.
They were both shooting 25-47s.
I actually can’t even get blackjacks right now. I have 100 of them back ordered since March and I don’t expect to see them anytime soon.

These are the Berger Elite Hunter 133.
 
Sorry to leave you hanging. I don’t frequent these boards as much as I once did. The results have been exactly what we hoped for.
20211226_100623.jpeg
A buddy helped with load development that turned out great. Turns out that RL23 and 133 gn Berger Hybrids were the recipe with the best results.

In the first season we put it to work on 4 elk:

My bull at 153 yds. Closer than we had planned, but I wasn’t going to backup. First shot was lethal behind the shoulder, second shot for insurance.
IMG_2245.jpeg
Nash’s first elk 135 yds. 1 shot, high shoulder.1AEA60DB-4309-44A9-973E-82658922BBE5.jpeg

Hunter’s cow. 1 shot, 309 yds, high shoulder.
596DC629-80EA-472F-82FA-F859F5AAA860.jpeg

Some pics of the damage and blood trail (3 yds)

IMG_2832.jpegIMG_2846.jpeg
That is the entrance side.

My Dad and I’s forkhorn muley. 1 shot, 250 yds. Cut two ribs, interesting that the bullet did not exit.
IMG_0054.jpeg

My brother’s bull. 550 yds, 2 shots, no exit (placement was questionable).
IMG_0417.jpeg

This year we added the Omega 36M suppressor. So much better than shooting with a break. Game changer for hunting situations.
IMG_1012.jpeg
Nash was the first to go suppressed in the field with his WY antelope. 1 shot, 350 yds.
IMG_2009.jpeg

Later that week we took a neighbor kid who added another cow elk. 1 shot, frontal, no exit (fragments/petals under hide behind last rib).
IMG_2151.jpeg

Overall, it’s exactly what we wanted. 1 gun to do it all.
 
Man, you really should have listened to folks and had those kids shoot something that stomped em a little harder in the shoulder. Those animals would have been so much deader..
You beat me to the snarkiness but I’m still going to say what I thought.

Sorry to leave you hanging. I don’t frequent these boards as much as I once did. The results have been exactly what we hoped for.
View attachment 301627
A buddy helped with load development that turned out great. Turns out that RL23 and 133 gn Berger Hybrids were the recipe with the best results.

In the first season we put it to work on 4 elk:

My bull at 153 yds. Closer than we had planned, but I wasn’t going to backup. First shot was lethal behind the shoulder, second shot for insurance.
View attachment 301628
Nash’s first elk 135 yds. 1 shot, high shoulder.View attachment 301629

Hunter’s cow. 1 shot, 309 yds, high shoulder.
View attachment 301630

Some pics of the damage and blood trail (3 yds)

View attachment 301632View attachment 301631
That is the entrance side.

My Dad and I’s forkhorn muley. 1 shot, 250 yds. Cut two ribs, interesting that the bullet did not exit.
View attachment 301633

My brother’s bull. 550 yds, 2 shots, no exit (placement was questionable).
View attachment 301634

This year we added the Omega 36M suppressor. So much better than shooting with a break. Game changer for hunting situations.
View attachment 301635
Nash was the first to go suppressed in the field with his WY antelope. 1 shot, 350 yds.
View attachment 301636

Later that week we took a neighbor kid who added another cow elk. 1 shot, frontal, no exit (fragments/petals under hide behind last rib).
View attachment 301637

Overall, it’s exactly what we wanted. 1 gun to do it all.
It’s a shame this wAsN’T a sIx PoInT FiVe. That surely would have made the difference.

Did you ever test out those 128gr Hammers?
 
Sorry to leave you hanging. I don’t frequent these boards as much as I once did. The results have been exactly what we hoped for.
View attachment 301627
A buddy helped with load development that turned out great. Turns out that RL23 and 133 gn Berger Hybrids were the recipe with the best results.

In the first season we put it to work on 4 elk:

My bull at 153 yds. Closer than we had planned, but I wasn’t going to backup. First shot was lethal behind the shoulder, second shot for insurance.
View attachment 301628
Nash’s first elk 135 yds. 1 shot, high shoulder.View attachment 301629

Hunter’s cow. 1 shot, 309 yds, high shoulder.
View attachment 301630

Some pics of the damage and blood trail (3 yds)

View attachment 301632View attachment 301631
That is the entrance side.

My Dad and I’s forkhorn muley. 1 shot, 250 yds. Cut two ribs, interesting that the bullet did not exit.
View attachment 301633

My brother’s bull. 550 yds, 2 shots, no exit (placement was questionable).
View attachment 301634

This year we added the Omega 36M suppressor. So much better than shooting with a break. Game changer for hunting situations.
View attachment 301635
Nash was the first to go suppressed in the field with his WY antelope. 1 shot, 350 yds.
View attachment 301636

Later that week we took a neighbor kid who added another cow elk. 1 shot, frontal, no exit (fragments/petals under hide behind last rib).
View attachment 301637

Overall, it’s exactly what we wanted. 1 gun to do it all.

Bet those wound channels would put a lot of bigger calibers with controlled expansion bullets to shame.
 
You beat me to the snarkiness but I’m still going to say what I thought.


It’s a shame this wAsN’T a sIx PoInT FiVe. That surely would have made the difference.

Did you ever test out those 128gr Hammers?
Nope. My buddy who has developed loads for several 25’s said my twist probably east fast enough. What we’ve got works great for what we are doing.
 
With all of the new high BC bullets I'm glad you went with the 25SST also. Mine has shot probably 50+ deer,elk,antelope in the last 5 years. It has shot all of those critters from 100-880 yards with extremely great success. Some quartering towards, some quartering away, broadside, in shoulder etc... We haven't lost an animal yet but occasionally some need a follow up shot if the vitals were not hit. Our same friend is just loading up the new 138 Atips for Oryx in NM at the end of the month. I'm hoping the A tips will perform better on marginal shots. I've shot the original 131 ace, 133 berger hunter and a lot of critters with the 135 berger.

The 25SST is my go to gun for everything so far. I'm sure I would pick my 300 RUM or something else for Moose, Grizzly or Bison, but for all of my needs and yours it is an awesome cartridge with huge performance out of a 25 cal with minimal recoil, easy to suppress and different than all of the 6.5s out there.
 
I do have a 25 SST that I’ve shot the last 3 plus years.

First of all, I have a 25 Creedmoor 28” barrel 8T and a 25 SST in 7.5 twist. I’ve shot thousands of the Berger 135 and 133s, and not near as many of the hornady 134 eld-m. All are fantastic bullets. I’ve never shot a 131 BJ ACE so I can’t speak to that.

My 25 SST is in a proof carbon 24” barrel and a MDT HNT26 chassis, so it is definitely a lightweight rifle. It shoots great mostly with the 133s as it is my hunting rifle so I don’t shoot many 135s out of it now that I’ve found my load.

I can’t go down the path to say if I could only have one rifle and say it would be a 25 SST. It definitely wouldn’t. It would be something completely boring like a 6.5 CM probably… but that’s not reality. If you want one good for you. You can find the Bergers in stock aplenty. The 134 eld-m from hornady surprisingly shoot amazing in both my rifles as well. How many guys end up shooting a half dozen bullets out of the same rifle??? I do only in my 22 calibers (22 BR, 22 CM sometimes, 22 ARC, 223 Rem all the time) but not on any of my other rifles so I don’t care about 12 options in a caliber if there are a couple amazing options that shoot great across the gambet.

The 25 SST is a fine carrridge. I don’t shoot the 133, 134 or 135 at 3,200 or 3,250 though I could. I think my accuracy node is just over 3,100 MV in the 25 SST. Hopefully that means that I’ll get a few hundred rounds down the tube before she’s shot out.

I’ll take a berger over a blackjack Ace any day of the week and I’ve never shot one… because they haven’t been available. I think Berger has shown preference to the 257. But even if they end up scrapping it, I have enough bullets for both my barrels and then some… I’m not worried about that.

It’s a fun cartridge, but isn’t a cure all… there isn’t one as long as I can afford to source and shoot two…

It’s pretty accurate but I have other more accurate loads (maybe cartridge, who knows?) it will hit hard for a 25 cal.

I don’t shoot the SST like I do my range guns so I’m not worried about barrel life.

If I had a 30 cal I wouldn’t shoot an elk with it… however, my 10 year old son might… or my wife… I wouldn’t have a problem with that from a shorter range… I had a near mishap in the last couple months of years with a 6.5 PRC with a berger 156 EOL. 400 yard shot snapped the cows front shoulder but no blood… luckily the herd was in the snow and we tracked her down a few hundred yards… it was out in the open which was fortunate, and she was going any farther, but we don’t have found her in the dark timbers… That stuff happens with the 30 cap magnums as well… but I assume not as much as with a 257.

I’m glad you like it. I really like mine though I’m always hot on something one year and trying something different the next… it’s a very fun round and I love shooting something that most people don’t even know what it is…
 
What is the comparison between the 25SST and a 25-6.5PRC?

Should be within a couple grains of case capacity so very similar. SST case is a little shorter so less likelihood of magazine constraints if using a more traditional short action magazine length. SST case geometry might hide pressure signs a bit more.
 
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