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I've only killed 2 animals with them, both close, so take my thoughts with a grain of salt. But I have been very impressed with the terminal performance of the 156s. With a prc that would absolutely be what I'd be looking for.Like Snowy mentioned, we've used 139 Scenars on game enough to be pretty confident in the results, and the results are good.
However, I'll be loading some ELD-M 147's in my 6.5 PRC for use in the future, unless I stumble upon a decent stash of 156 Bergers. The focus of that rifle tips me towards their superior BC's, and I expect either will perform like I'd want on game. I've been wrong before, but I do have one bull and two bucks under the belt with 147's, no complaints.
I've only killed 2 animals with them, both close, so take my thoughts with a grain of salt. But I have been very impressed with the terminal performance of the 156s. With a prc that would absolutely be what I'd be looking for.
There kind of right on the line of velocity vs bc with a Creedmoor, though. I can get 2650 but I'm only 3/10 of a grain under pressure signs. And yes, availability is an issue..
I've never shot 147s so maybe they're just as good. I've sure heard lots of good about them.Thanks for the input. My PRC load with 147's gets me 3030 fps, though I need to switch powders and that could cost me a few fps, nothing I'm going to sweat. I expect to be 2950 +/- with the 156's. I've got just under 100 of them, and MIGHT talk myself into trying them for bear in the spring, but would rather have a few hundred more.
That's an excellent story. You basically killed a deer by tripping him.View attachment 207024
This is the only bullet recovery I've ever saved. It's a 150 gr corelok from a .30-30, used on my first deer at age 14 at under 200 yards. Looks like it should.
Except it didn't do what it should. It hit the front shoulder, mushroomed and stopped without even cracking the shoulder blade, let alone any real penetration. The result was nothing but a flesh wound.
However, it did cause the buck to stumble, and the slope was so steep he couldn't recover, tumbled out of control and broke his back on a tree.
Sometimes it's better to be lucky than good.That's an excellent story. You basically killed a deer by tripping him.
To be fair, you were both lucky and good. The bullet was the weak link...Sometimes it's better to be lucky than good.
If you'd have seen my sight picture in the moments before yanking the trigger like I was setting the hook on a 9 foot sturgeon, you'd take back the good part.To be fair, you were both lucky and good. The bullet was the weak link...
Made me chuckle. Friend told me a story where he shot a elk in the front hoof. Bullet deflected off something in its flight path. Caused the elk to trip coming down a steep grade. The fall killed it, guys at camp still kid him about hoof shooting when the Jamison comes out.That's an excellent story. You basically killed a deer by tripping him.
View attachment 207024
This is the only bullet recovery I've ever saved. It's a 150 gr corelok from a .30-30, used on my first deer at age 14 at under 200 yards. Looks like it should.
Except it didn't do what it should. It hit the front shoulder, mushroomed and stopped without even cracking the shoulder blade, let alone any real penetration. The result was nothing but a flesh wound.
However, it did cause the buck to stumble, and the slope was so steep he couldn't recover, tumbled out of control and broke his back on a tree.
Glad to know 2 more people I trust and value their experiences before a big switch up..I don’t know how many elk, deer, bears, and antelope myself, @Carl and those borrowing our guns have killed with 139 scenars but it’s a lot. + a mountain goat. 35-40? Probably more. There are slipperier .264 projectiles out there but I’ve not seen another one that balances penetration and destruction so sweetly.
Word has it they even work on home raised beef.
Those first few years, I shot Barnes TSX's exclusively. I had a lot of iffy kills, almost 50%. I don't think any of them were directly attributable to the Barnes, they were all placement issues. Some placement was do to just getting excited and rushing situations too much, some were surely due to the Leupold 3-9's I was using losing zero literally every single season.
My takeaways:
- Have a weapon system you trust to stay zero'd and work correctly, then be paranoid about losing zero. I haven't been testing this enough recently but need to get back to it. I remain paranoid about it.