Lead vs Copper Ammo: It's time for a change.

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  • Опубликовано: 12 фев 2024
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Комментарии • 493

  • @sethboyce9832
    @sethboyce9832 4 месяца назад +108

    More people would Probly be open to solid copper if California hadn’t banned lead bullets

    • @kevinmartin2096
      @kevinmartin2096 4 месяца назад +22

      Most Americans, with any level of common sense really aren’t super tolerant to the government telling them what to do.

    • @nozrep
      @nozrep 4 месяца назад +7

      @@kevinmartin2096i dunno if you’ve been paying attention but it appears as if the number of those people is dwindling. Which of course is not good. Which of course is why we must stop underestimating the enemy. And fight them as hard and harder than they are fighting us. Peacefully. Before it devolves and we have actually re-assert the Bill of Rights, forcefully. Or the Declaration of Independence, forcefully.

    • @brianklamer3328
      @brianklamer3328 4 месяца назад

      Unless if they want the Government to coddle them from birth to the grave.......

    • @rperry70
      @rperry70 4 месяца назад +2

      @@nozrep It would seem the propensity of people would rather be told what to do than be free. They feel safer or something. I guarantee there are many that actually miss the covid debacle.

    • @beavismagnum
      @beavismagnum 4 месяца назад +6

      Literally the mindset of a child

  • @sylviajones3355
    @sylviajones3355 4 месяца назад +24

    Paul just got his 1 million subscriber plaque.

  • @aaronpudlicki7418
    @aaronpudlicki7418 4 месяца назад +8

    What have we turned into where we feel it’s ~painful~ that we couldn’t take a 700 yard shot because we couldn’t get closer.

  • @fielddogs8577
    @fielddogs8577 4 месяца назад +11

    We’ve used Barnes for years on several mule dear and 8+ elk in 270 , 30-06, and 7 mag all within 400 yds. Very pleased with performance.

    • @FullQuiverOutdoors
      @FullQuiverOutdoors 4 месяца назад +1

      I’ve had the same luck with the Barnes. Great bullets!

    • @timbjork2098
      @timbjork2098 2 месяца назад

      same fast one shot kills all pass threw with alot of damage on the internals on the elk I shot with 7remmag and 270wsm both around 350-400

  • @user-qx6rf7rb2x
    @user-qx6rf7rb2x 4 месяца назад +15

    I have hunted Moose and Caribu in NWT with nosler partición in ranges from 100 to 300yrds with my270BDL and never an issue while I knew lots of hunters that used 30 30 partición as well with great results, now days I hunt deer and moose in ontario and when using my 300WM , moose only, Federal nosler partición, 180 grain and again great results, problem now a days is we have such great selección of ammo that makes it complicated to choose sometimes, keep up the great videos Jim

  • @aktideracer8710
    @aktideracer8710 4 месяца назад +33

    Man you guys need to study up, copper being lighter needs to be longer per weight to it has a higher BC but a lower sectional density as copper isn’t as dense as lead. Copper bullets work great and allow you to aim more forward and drill through the shoulder as it’s a lot tougher material then lead. But at longer ranges lead tends to be better because lead takes less energy to expand and once you’ve ran out of velocity copper tends not to expand as much. Copper for dangerous game/tough animals or shoulder drilling up close and use lead for long range or more traditional lung shots. If you live in Cali sucks for you just don’t move up here to AK and vote liberal.

    • @Guysm1l3y
      @Guysm1l3y 4 месяца назад +3

      These dorks will obsess about a sub-1% difference in cartridge performance but then be like "hey y'all, copper is totes great!" It's pathetic.

    • @MrCobb-rq8iv
      @MrCobb-rq8iv 18 дней назад

      @@Guysm1l3y Yea and they are stuck on the 6.5 bandwagon, what will it be next new kid on the block following mfr. promotions? When they are all dead the 100 yr. old 30.06 will still beat them with the latest ammo. JMO

  • @jefferyrobbins3468
    @jefferyrobbins3468 4 месяца назад +12

    My experience with copper on deer is that the bullet pencils through the chest with very little blood trail, unless you hit solid bone to get the copper bullet to expand more. If you shoot a lead core bullet with a thick copper jacket/base, it should not fragment too much while expanding (i.e. no cheap cup and core bullets).

    • @Nick-sx6jm
      @Nick-sx6jm 4 месяца назад +2

      Yeah really wanted to like them but time after time I had zero blood trails and insanely long track jobs because the bullets wouldnt expand. Caused me to lose a nice bear and almost a nice 8pt. Im not shooting slow cartridges either. I tried them in a 257wby, 340 wby, and 7x61. Hand loads and factory ammo all with poor results on great shots.

    • @jefferyrobbins3468
      @jefferyrobbins3468 4 месяца назад

      Sounds like the same experience I've had, when I tried the all copper bullets multiple times in my 270 Win. I finally gave up on them. @@Nick-sx6jm

    • @redoakranch1783
      @redoakranch1783 4 месяца назад

      Yes, this. My family hunts blacktail deer and we all switched from .243 to .308. Since the lead ban. Back to one shot kills.

    • @telesniper2
      @telesniper2 3 месяца назад +1

      just make spinal shots if you're worried about tracking the animal.

    • @justintempus7406
      @justintempus7406 3 месяца назад

      What caliber are you shooting? My 260 rem blows out a quarter sized exit on blacktail and whitetail deer with 120gr barnes ttsx on double lung shots. My dataset is somewhat limited, but it's 7 or 8 blacktails and 6 caribou with that load. They usually don't make it more than 20-30 yards. The TSX is less aggressive, but they still don't get far. If your experience was with the original TSX, they have come a very long way.

  • @TrondOleJensen
    @TrondOleJensen 4 месяца назад +12

    Have switched many years ago to Barnes 270 grs TSX.

  • @brianklamer3328
    @brianklamer3328 4 месяца назад +11

    We painted our houses with lead based paint, drank water from a garden hose, drove cars that burned leaded gasoline that had no airbags with 2 point seatbelts, do you guys really think men are worried about a lead based bullet that killed their deer or elk?

    • @theastro-philosophersappre2786
      @theastro-philosophersappre2786 4 месяца назад +6

      And don’t leave out the cars that didn’t have seatbelts, and motorcycles without a helmet

    • @brianklamer3328
      @brianklamer3328 4 месяца назад

      We rode dirt bikes without helmets too!@@theastro-philosophersappre2786

    • @GRIGGINS1
      @GRIGGINS1 4 месяца назад +3

      And a lot of people in that generation got cancer.

    • @demonkinglamb636
      @demonkinglamb636 Месяц назад

      ​@@GRIGGINS1 More people have gotten cancer from all the processed foods in the 2000s. Even more cancer today from even harsher processed foods in 2024.

  • @TDINWY
    @TDINWY 4 месяца назад +33

    CU bullets need VELOCITY to perform correctly. Under 2K FPS YOU ARE ON YOUR OWN.

    • @thehappyclam3942
      @thehappyclam3942 4 месяца назад

      Yup and with powder coated hand cast Pb ammo over 2k fps you are on your own.

    • @sergej23kv
      @sergej23kv 4 месяца назад +6

      Incorrect. Not all of it is the same. Barnes LRX needs 1600fps for successful expansion.

    • @aktideracer8710
      @aktideracer8710 4 месяца назад +1

      Yep

    • @allthingsconsidered3211
      @allthingsconsidered3211 4 месяца назад +6

      @@sergej23kvthe expansion is minimal to almost 0% at that velocity

    • @sergej23kv
      @sergej23kv 4 месяца назад +3

      @@allthingsconsidered3211 no it is not. LRX is designed to expand at lower velocities. You can use whatever you want but you can't change facts. 1.7 diameters expansion at 1600. 2x expansion at 1800+ fps.

  • @BadoreksDailys
    @BadoreksDailys 4 месяца назад +13

    High BC bonded bullets really are a sweet spot. AccuBond LR, Norma Bondstrikes, etc. if you’re after higher BC and penetration, that’s a great choice.

  • @bobbymabe2313
    @bobbymabe2313 4 месяца назад +7

    All my rifles shoot lead better than copper.

  • @sierraharvester
    @sierraharvester 4 месяца назад +15

    @backfire look at the California condor reports on lead. After CA banned lead ammo, it was revealed that bird lead poisoning is most frequently from paint.

    • @RileyPierce_
      @RileyPierce_ 3 месяца назад +2

      People love to blame the guys with the guns.

    • @JamesClark-lw6sw
      @JamesClark-lw6sw 2 месяца назад

      Yep- LEAD BANS ARE ANTI- GUN BULLSH*T

  • @bneaclab1
    @bneaclab1 4 месяца назад +3

    Thanks for keeping the 'long range' real and putting ethics first.

  • @danblalock9894
    @danblalock9894 4 месяца назад +5

    I have been loading, Badland Precision 150-grain Bulldozer 2 copper mono's in my 7-SAUM. These bullets have extremely high BC's and shoot very tight groups.
    I had three one shot kills on whitetails at 268, 411, 500-yards. With copper bullets you need to know where your velocity drops below 1,600 - 1,800 fps to find your ideal maximum range.
    Very good video.

  • @user-tw5te8nl2m
    @user-tw5te8nl2m 4 месяца назад +3

    Some interesting points, just keep monitoring how your animals are stood, where your bullet strikes and more importantly where it exists

  • @mikemellon80
    @mikemellon80 4 месяца назад +7

    Trophy bonded tip! Best of both worlds. Terminal ascent. Same bullet basically. Lead front, copper back end for penetration. Way underrated bullet

    • @jamesgriffin7743
      @jamesgriffin7743 4 месяца назад +1

      I second this. I use the 200gr in a 300wm shoots .5moa at 500 yards and devastates deer and elk

    • @EnderPearlRs
      @EnderPearlRs 3 месяца назад

      I am still in research phase before I actually start hunting and I think you guys just decided the cartridges I'm buying, thanks!

    • @mikemellon80
      @mikemellon80 3 месяца назад +1

      @@EnderPearlRs I’ve been hunting for 31 years. It’s the best bullet I’ve ever used. Expansion and deep penetration. You can find the trophy bonded tips on midway USA and other sites. I like the grain weight options you get over the terminal ascents. Pick a caliber then buy a box of different weights to see what your rifle likes. My 308 loves 165g. Doesn’t like the 180s

    • @EnderPearlRs
      @EnderPearlRs 3 месяца назад

      @mikemellon80 I did a lot of hunting when I was a kid. My first stepfather owned a hunting plantation but it's been around 14years or so since I've shot anything other than paper. And even that has been far too infrequent but is changing!
      Think my first rifle will be either 30-06 or .308

  • @Error-4-0-4-
    @Error-4-0-4- 4 месяца назад +3

    I've been using the Hammer bullets and love them my go-to bullet for hunting now.

  • @jonbaniak9097
    @jonbaniak9097 4 месяца назад +9

    I believe there are far better choices for elk than 6.5 Creedmore. I’ve been using Hammer bullets for 3 years now and have not had a deer take a step after the shot. Extremely accurate too.

    • @davidwarren3433
      @davidwarren3433 4 месяца назад

      I agree. I have a 6.5 CM and I have other rifles with better calibers for Elk.

    • @borkwoof696
      @borkwoof696 4 месяца назад +1

      Agreed but it’s also not unusable

    • @southeastwhitetails
      @southeastwhitetails 4 месяца назад

      Not one single step?

    • @jonbaniak9097
      @jonbaniak9097 4 месяца назад

      @@southeastwhitetails nope!

  • @arnierawleigh1543
    @arnierawleigh1543 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for doing these videos

  • @dylanschannel6275
    @dylanschannel6275 4 месяца назад +1

    Very pleased with the Hornady Cx 120gr chambering in the 6.5cm

  • @DARRELLGRIFFITHS
    @DARRELLGRIFFITHS 4 месяца назад +3

    Careful what you wish for, the deer boys here in the U.K. started using non-Lead, next thing the Government are trying to ban all Lead ammo, it’s seen as many as a back door to making guns obsolete here. If any of you have tried non-Lead .22LR ammo you’ll no what I mean, it’s crap.

  • @andystampfli9127
    @andystampfli9127 4 месяца назад +5

    There isn't a single good reason to scrub your barrel down to work up a load that might shoot as well as the tried and true lead core bullet. Anyone who says they are just as good has a stake in the game for selling copper bullets. Copper needs a clean barrel it says so on every box of bullets... It's lower BC, it doesn't expand as much or as fast, they are longer for weight making them over oacl for some bullet/ actions. Trying to "save the world" one bullet at a time is totally BS. Yes the California condors proved it's a thing yet having hunters bury the guts was never an option. It's a gun control issue nothing else. Good enough is not just as good

  • @jwjenkins421
    @jwjenkins421 4 месяца назад +8

    I have a 270 win, I started hunting 7 years ago in Utah, and I've been hunting with copper bullets most of that time. This year I reloaded with badlands bulldozer 2 bullet, 128 gr with a bc .531 and an initial mv of 3200 fps its holding 2000 fps out to 920 yards, which may vary depending on temp, elevation, etc. It maintains 1500 ftlbs energy out to 670 yards. The front end is designed to expand, then fracture the petals from the base, creating greater wounding potential. I shot a Cow at about 250 yards, and the results were amazing. The cow went down immediately, and I got over 4 ft of penetration, including shattering the pelvis on the way out. I had exit wounds from petals on both sides of the chest cavity being as it was a frontal shot that means those petals traveled 10 to 15 inches through lungs, rib,meat and hide. It was quite amazing.

    • @BirdArmory
      @BirdArmory 4 месяца назад

      Copper bullets for hunting are the way to go…they hit way harder then lead 👍🏼

  • @JKfarmby
    @JKfarmby 3 месяца назад +1

    For whitetails I am Loving the Hammer Bullets in 6.5mm. An 85gr Hammer Hunter (at 3,450 fps) designed to shed 40-50% when expanding dumps a Huge amount of energy into the vital region, while the remaining 50 to 60% completes pass-through. These are also designed to expand at lower velocity around 1100 to 1200 FPS if I remember correctly.
    #HammerBullets #Hammer

    • @Wallymakesstuff
      @Wallymakesstuff 3 месяца назад +1

      Hammer bullets are a unicorn. Truly the best of all worlds. Makes you re-evaluate how terminal ballistics can work.

  • @RF-cz4ln
    @RF-cz4ln 4 месяца назад +2

    Staying with what works .👍🏻🇺🇸👍🏿

  • @bullhunter20jw33
    @bullhunter20jw33 2 месяца назад +1

    I tried some Barnes LRX in some recent load work-ups. Starting with a clean bore, several trips back and forth to the range, and 40 rounds later, the rifle would no longer group, much less hit an 8" plate at 100 yards. I've never experienced copper fouling like that in my life. 12 hours of scrubbing with CU+ copper remover. (8 hours of frustration, I had to resume for another 4 hours the next morning.) I will NEVER use copper bullets again! Jacketed lead bullets have never done that in any of my rifles. P.S. I have several boxes of Barnes .338 cal 250gr. LRX and TSX bullets for sale real cheap. And some .308 cal 190gr LRX too.

  • @Michigan4Conservative
    @Michigan4Conservative 4 месяца назад +1

    I like the "Casual Chat" after the hunt. 👍
    Granted, 80+ degree weather would be a different case with the game waiting for the end of the interview before processing. 😅

  • @lz3572
    @lz3572 4 месяца назад +3

    Jim good video.
    I have not tried copper yet because I have great results with the Swift Aframe
    In 7mag 160gr.
    But I’m sure the copper at high velocity will do fine

    • @brianklamer3328
      @brianklamer3328 4 месяца назад +2

      Stick with the A-Frame bullets and the heck with copper!

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 4 месяца назад +1

      Came here to mention the A-Frame as well. Best of both worlds: "Partitioned" & BONDED Lead core bullet. Like an absolute plow through game. 286gr in my 9.3x62 Ruger No.1 just anchors moose like they've been poleaxed.

  • @martinrousseau75
    @martinrousseau75 4 месяца назад

    Jim,
    Pleased with the subject, I reload only copper for hunting by choice since 10 years+ for all familial rifle. I agree with most of your comments. Concerning the minimum speed for bullet opening from manufacturer, Most of the Barnes LRX open at 1400fps -1500fps, The Barnes TTSX, some open as low 1500fps and most at 2000fps. You have to call customer services at Barnes to know. I now use more and more Cutting Edge bullet in the Lazer and Maximus line. They have the highest BC you will find in monolithic. The best fabrication consistency of the industry. Additionally, the head fragment in smaller piece duplicating the lead big drop of energy when they fragment. They also open at a minimum speed of 1300fps with the tipped Lazer and 1400fps with the Maximus. Unfortunately, I'm Hunting in north east of Canada in the dense woods I never had the dream long shot. The max shot made with them is 247 yards. So, I can't say how they perform at longer. They are dropping Moose and bear faster than Barnes, on deer equivalent of Barnes. I noticed the wound cavity is very different. Barnes often liquify the lung, these are not.

  • @Mafiaal1
    @Mafiaal1 4 месяца назад +1

    I would also consider that there is conventional lead and bonded lead which does make a difference. For me, the cooper bullets I’ve shot which are designed to peddle off x amount of copper tend to do a lot more damage to the meat over the lead core bullets. This is just my personal experience with these bullets at closer ranges 150 yards and closer.

  • @nataliedeyton6829
    @nataliedeyton6829 4 месяца назад +3

    Hell no…. Now I may use it but don’t tell me what I can and can’t use to kill my animals….. or other things

  • @MD-vm9hj
    @MD-vm9hj 4 месяца назад

    Just came back from a hunt in Africa. I took Kudud, Sable, Eland, wildebeast, Nyala, and 7 more all with -06 175grn Barnes LRX. All fell with 1 shot several shots out passed 500yds. I was able to recover 4 of the bullets and had perfect expansion at that range. None of the animals went more then 20yds, some dropped in their tracks. I'm sold on solid copper and Barnes.

  • @Accidic
    @Accidic 4 месяца назад +1

    I like the copper at short ranges for minimal lead exposure (and it's OFTEN cheaper to boot). Lead for accuracy/longer shots and a Partition penetrates just fine and to lower velocities than solids consistently. I don't hunt anything large enough to matter though.
    The resistance I'd expect are from those who like the frag grenade bullets for deer hunting. I'm not a fan of the Hornady line at all for this reason and that behavior (save for a couple hundred Hornady solids I picked up to try if I ever get around to it). Maybe the Cutting Edge and similar would coax them over.

  • @boylukefirearms
    @boylukefirearms 4 месяца назад +2

    good work guys

  • @deangustafson7533
    @deangustafson7533 4 месяца назад +5

    I use Hammer bullets in my reloads. Performance on game has been wonderful. Using copper bullets at a lighter weight than lead, and I have found them to be less destructive as far as bloodshot/unusable meat. I loved my Nosler Accubonds, but I’ll stay with the Hammer bullets from here on out. I use them in my 264 WM, 280 AI and 300 WM. As far as taking more time in developing a reload, I disagree on it taking more time, being more difficult, at least that’s been my experience with each of the above rifles. I have also found that copper likes a little bit of a jump. I’m sure we all have our own opinions of it, but I eat what I hunt, and so far copper has worked exceptionally well for me.

    • @criticalbo
      @criticalbo 4 месяца назад +1

      You guys need to catch up to the times. Barnes aren't the only copper bullets made. Go check out bullet makers like the Mcguire, Apex bullets,hammer bullets.

    • @christopherbenfield7848
      @christopherbenfield7848 4 месяца назад

      @@criticalbo 🤣🤣🤣 yeah and they suck compared to either Barns or Hornady…crappy BC’s and hardly ANY reliable performance!! Secondly the REAL monolithic are made by Cutting Edge and Werner tool!! They are for ELR match rifles…

    • @jcjustice3786
      @jcjustice3786 4 месяца назад +1

      👍

    • @8asw8
      @8asw8 4 месяца назад

      @@criticalbo Or just use a Sako Hammerhead which eats each of the aboves lunch. Any day of the week and twice on sunday.

    • @criticalbo
      @criticalbo 4 месяца назад

      @@8asw8 yeah ive been looking into those. I dont think I can get them in components yet, only loaded ammunition. Ive heard great things about them.

  • @daithi1966
    @daithi1966 4 месяца назад +2

    ~
    *Copper Bullets Silver Lining*
    "Honest honey, CA now requires us to hunt with copper bullets to save the condors. I _had_ to buy this new 7mm PRC rifle to get the range my 6.5 Creedmoor had with lead bullets."

    • @daithi1966
      @daithi1966 4 месяца назад

      Honestly, I like the copper bullets for shorter ranges, and I like a larger caliber copper bullets for longer ranges. I just don't like CA making it a law that I can only use them and have to get a background check every time I buy them at a state licensed FFL.

  • @DaleMead-wf9xv
    @DaleMead-wf9xv 4 месяца назад +1

    My family all shoot Barnes changed when my son shot his first wt buck with a rem core lock 7 mag he made a good shot but bullet exploded on contact we got it 500 yards later shrapnel everywhere changed. To tsx when they first came out 8 moose and a 10 bull elk and a bunch of deer later we shot ttsx 150 gr 4’ of penetration only found 4 bullets on frontal shots stay under 400 yds and they are deadly happy hunting from northern alberta

  • @llamawizard
    @llamawizard 4 месяца назад +3

    Not sure if yall mentioned it, but because you get so much better penetration with copper, you can shoot a lighter bullet and get higher velocities than with lead.

    • @AlienMetals
      @AlienMetals 4 месяца назад +3

      I agree with you, in particular i use the Barnes 130gr TTSX in 308 Win. With the increase in MV it makes up for the low BC of .350. I also am an East Coast hunter and my shots are seldom very far. For comparison though in 308 Win with a 200yd zero the 130gr TTSX (BC.350) drops appx 19" at 400yds and the 168gr TTSX (BC .470) drops appx 24". Even at 500 yds the 130gr load drops appx 9" less than the higher BC bullet. I can't emphasize enough how important it is to take the type of hunting as well as the realistic distances you may encounter before choosing any type of bullet. BC is by no means the leading factor in choosing a bullet but rather one data point amongst many. One area where I think copper bullets lag in lethality compared to lead is at distance. I wouldn't want to shoot past appx 325yds and ideally 200yds or less with my 130gr TTSX in 308 as copper bullets need velocity to perform. If I was using copper and hunting out West I'd look real hard at a 300 Win Mag using the same 130gr TTSX.

    • @borkwoof696
      @borkwoof696 4 месяца назад

      Yes, but also a lower BC. All tradeoffs and compromises.

  • @azredneck7722
    @azredneck7722 4 месяца назад +2

    Absolutely opposed to any legislation that bans lead ammo. We have to fight to retain all the rights we enjoy. The anti hunters will take any inch you give them. They're not interested in "compromise", but stripping away what they feel they can get away with.

    • @orinriver
      @orinriver 4 месяца назад +2

      I hunt but I also consider myself a conservationist. It is not about taking away anyone's rights but about making choices that will protect our lands and the creatures on it for generations to come. To me copper is a compromise. Price is a problem for sure, but otherwise it is just adapting. I understand the rights issue and I am pretty tired of the political landscape, but to me protecting our lands goes beyond politics.

    • @8asw8
      @8asw8 4 месяца назад +2

      @@orinriver Except that copper is toxic itself as well as the danger of lead ammo is highly inflated.

    • @Guysm1l3y
      @Guysm1l3y 4 месяца назад

      @@8asw8 For 20 years kids have been indoctrinated to think lead is as deadly as plutonium.

    • @yongli8276
      @yongli8276 2 месяца назад

      @@8asw8
      Eating too much of anything is toxic.
      Copper isn't easily digested by the body either, especially metal copper. Copper is also a trace mineral the body needs so you're even less likely to be poisoned by it compared to lead. Lead is straight up poison to the body despite being so easy to absorb. Lead literally does nothing beneficial in the body, unlike copper.
      For reference, the toxicity level for copper is more than 140 mcg/dL in blood. For lead, it is 3.5 mcg/dL or more in blood. It takes way less lead to poison you than copper.
      Most copper poisoning comes from copper salt made in water pipes, not eating pennies. This is the same case for lead as well. You're more likely to get an ulcer than poisoning from swallowing copper.
      I agree with you that the danger of lead ammo is highly inflated, but so is your implication of the danger of copper.

  • @BigdaddyE71
    @BigdaddyE71 Месяц назад

    Mine and my daughter's last 10 deer have been with 80 grain copper bullets from my 243. NONE have made it past 50 yds! Most drop in their tracks! Hello from Mississippi!

  • @user-lj6eb9er1c
    @user-lj6eb9er1c 4 месяца назад +2

    Remington 6.5 prc long range copper ammunition is 87 dollars a box

  • @uoislame
    @uoislame 4 месяца назад +3

    ditch lead ammo? well, i'd suggest practicing with hardened steel. you know, just in case.

  • @tripplebeards3427
    @tripplebeards3427 4 месяца назад +3

    I will always shoot lead unless it’s in a state that’s against the law to do so. Lead bullets are way more accurate than any all copper bullet in existence. How many competition shooters use all copper bullets?

  • @stephencarmichael5156
    @stephencarmichael5156 21 день назад

    I took a whitetail deer at just 30 yards with a 7-08 BLR running Nosler gamekings 140g and it made a small entry and small exit hole, blew the lead tip all to bits and made a massive internal damage to the thorax taking both lungs into mush, broke the back shoulder bone and I ended up with lead fragments all through the back shoulder. I was not impressed with the blood loss as all the blood pooled up inside the thorax. I'm accustomed to the 30-30 round nose that just plows big holes and makes all the damage while retaining wight after a full exit. This is why i switched my 7-08 to a Hornady CX alloy bullet for 2024.

  • @user-cl7jw7td5q
    @user-cl7jw7td5q 4 месяца назад +1

    Right on big Jim! I too am pulling toward copper. I hope I can hire your bro there. That’d be cool to get set up with that out fit. I need all the help I can get -Thanks

  • @TheTonygong
    @TheTonygong 4 месяца назад +1

    Lots of angry elves coming after the title incoming 😂
    Good content, and I appreciate the conversation

  • @JM_BoltActionGunStuff
    @JM_BoltActionGunStuff 4 месяца назад +1

    Been using sako powerhead blade since it came out. works very well. Also barnes ttsx. both used to shoot moose and deers. the lapua naturalis is also very good bullet.

  • @e.l.robbins5614
    @e.l.robbins5614 4 месяца назад

    Nailed it Jim!

  • @peterweikel7123
    @peterweikel7123 4 месяца назад +2

    I am a long time fan of the nosler accubond. I absolutely love the performance of this bullet in every caliber I shoot. That said, it is difficult to find where I am and I have needed to find a substitute. I have started loading with some of the Barnes bullets and even the Hornady CX and I think my conversion is complete. I truly wish I could find the Nosler but since it isn't to be copper is going to fill the void.

    • @ingelri2
      @ingelri2 4 месяца назад

      I'm an Accubond fan, too. I've had good luck finding factory seconds, and stock up when I can.

  • @thefink1990
    @thefink1990 4 месяца назад

    I shot a deer with a 300blk 110 grain maker rex all copper bullet this year. 201 yards out of a 10.5 barrel and she went streight down. Recovered the bullet and it measured almost 3/4 of an inch opened up. The bullet went threw hit a rib destroyed the heart turned and found it near the rear in the back muscle. Crazy how far that bullet turned and traveled.

  • @paulb6991
    @paulb6991 4 месяца назад +15

    A bird with lead poisoning is called a successful dove hunt😂

  • @jimholman5045
    @jimholman5045 4 месяца назад +1

    Is that an outdoor edge replaceable blade knife?

  • @Joshkayla8487
    @Joshkayla8487 4 месяца назад +3

    Ill stick with my lead bullets. My rifles that ive tried factory copper loads in dont like copper.

  • @TheChayseEmge
    @TheChayseEmge 4 месяца назад +1

    I’ve been looking for Sako ammo. Where did you purchase it from?

  • @gogart3
    @gogart3 Месяц назад

    Good, Thx

  • @rodgerthackeray7978
    @rodgerthackeray7978 4 месяца назад

    Close shot and high muzzle velocity (2950+) = copper
    Muzzle velocity under 2950, take your pick.
    If shooting long-range, heavy for caliber lead is probably best.
    Small caliber (6.5 creedmoor, etc) definitely copper for elk.
    I have shot both lead and copper.
    I'm moving from copper back to lead due to newly designed heavy for caliber bullets, allowing me to achieve the same results with less recoil.
    I used to shoot a 7RUM with 140 tsx bullet @ 3600 fps. Shot many deer with that setup. Now shooting a modified 7SAUM with 175 ABLR at 2900, which also increases my range with less recoil.

  • @md3280
    @md3280 4 месяца назад +2

    Absolutely not because not liking the accuracy of most copper type ammo versus traditional ammo.

  • @wa2txcory
    @wa2txcory 4 месяца назад +1

    Interesting. I have made the decision to switch to copper for Whitetail from now on. My 8 year old son shot 3 deer plus my 2 plus about 12 hogs this past year. Have used Hornady for years and years and have been absolutely lethal. No issues ever. Buttttt I also got tired of cutting out a few lbs of meat on any shots that weren’t exclusively vitals. Even slightly hitting front shoulder results is crazy blood shot from 40-425 yards on the game. Hornady cx has shot amazing so far over Barnes but going to keep testing for 6.5prc and 7mag.

  • @lz3572
    @lz3572 4 месяца назад

    I think I will. As long as I can keep finding them!!

  • @42N8_1
    @42N8_1 4 месяца назад +2

    Ditch copper! I refuse to use copper ammunition. Higher pressure and less performance on the animal.

  • @brkyq
    @brkyq 4 месяца назад +1

    Both have a place in my hunting. I just prefer not to use copper in my slower rifles or if the shots may be longer.
    Knowing what copper does at different velocities is important. Not as critical with bonded.

  • @jw3558
    @jw3558 4 месяца назад

    Hi ! First, thank you for your content. I'm learning a lot from it ! I'm new to hunting and would like to know if for next hunting season copper bullet would be recommended for me : i'm hunting at distances between 50 and 300 yards, exclusively wild boar (European as I live in France, I don't know if there is a difference) between 40 to 100kg or 80 to 200lbs (most of them will be around 100lbs) with a 30-06. I plan on reloading my ammunition and was thinking of something like 125gr hornady CX or barnes TTSX with a muzzle speed around 3000 fps
    Again, many thanks and take care =D

  • @brendavanorden9550
    @brendavanorden9550 4 месяца назад +1

    The only reason lead has the shit name is from South dakota. They proved the all the shotshells over years compromised fields of geese.

  • @lostcreek7551
    @lostcreek7551 4 месяца назад +5

    ⁠windmills probably kill more birds or high frequency transmission. Messing with migratory birds or if the frequency is fast enough. It can literally cook the bird, microwave radio transmission. But reducing availability of ammo and increasing prices. Does not make sense. Specifically having bonded bullets for large game. This argument is fascinating for a sportsman to argue. “ I want less availability and higher prices”.

  • @trevorkolmatycki4042
    @trevorkolmatycki4042 4 месяца назад +5

    Copper vs lead is a silly way to frame the question. Bullet selection is application specific requiring understanding of species, range, cartridge, and factory vs hand load.
    For moose/elk with a 300WSM I use 175gr LRX
    For targets/training and deer hunting with a 7mm-08 we use 150gr ELDX
    For long range targets with a 308WIN I use 168gr ELDM and 178gr ELDX
    For flat shooting deer hunting in open terrain and 270WIN I use 129gr LRX and might try 150gr Accubond LR next in the 270 for use on Deer/Moose/Elk.
    For my youngest son and his 7mm-08 I have loaded 145gr LRX for Moose/Elk but would also be interested in trying 160gr accubonds or 168gr ABLR.
    The theme here is lead expansion bullets for targets and deer and solid copper or bonded lead penetration bullets for moose and elk.
    You really do need good penetration on something like a 1200lb bull Moose. The hide on moose is like armour plating and the bones are ginormous... and you keep shooting until they go down, which is usually an option because they typically don't tear off running at full bore like deer and elk after taking the first hit. There might be some meat loss plugging the beast with multiples but the yield is so high I recon its cheap insurance... it takes 5years to draw for moose so it is indeed a high value high yield tag that you do not want to mess up on.
    Cheers!

  • @fishermandancrook
    @fishermandancrook 4 месяца назад +2

    Stock up on both.

  • @tallboy49
    @tallboy49 4 месяца назад +1

    Just looking at the graph it appears that there is fairly consistent 300 ft/lb of energy loss with the copper at pretty much any range. That is very significent. Also copper projectiles are longer to get the weight in them and this can be a real pain as the bullet is down in the powder space when reloading to get your oal.

  • @jackjmaheriii
    @jackjmaheriii 4 месяца назад +8

    Sample size of 1, so take it for what it’s worth… 16 years ago I slammed a white tail, with a 30-06, that was quartering away, in a hind rib, and the bullet delaminated like it was made of popsicle sticks and paper mache instead of copper and lead. I was a young man, I needed the meat, and the bullet was a CoreLokt. I still have the box and 12 of the rounds. I’ve never had that problem with copper. Shout out to my dad who finished off the buck in late season.

    • @lancekrystoff9619
      @lancekrystoff9619 4 месяца назад +3

      Lot of guys swear by the Core-Lokt bullet, but my Dad never cared for them, citing similar instances as you describe. None of my rifles have ever, or will fire, a Remington Core Lokt.

    • @jackjmaheriii
      @jackjmaheriii 4 месяца назад

      To their credit, they did shoot 5 shot groups under 2 MOA out of my Vanguard, and in the early 2000’s, that was pretty good.

    • @Nick-sx6jm
      @Nick-sx6jm 4 месяца назад

      Had a really strange thing happen with a core lokt once. Shot a doe with a 100gr out of my 243 at maybe 75 yards and a while later saw it at 300 walking away with guts hanging out and shot it in the back of the neck and dropped it. When gutting/skinning I found the first bullet had only broke the skin on the same side I shot it and a small fragment broke off, deflected off bone, and zipped through the guts. Still have no idea how thats possible.

  • @derbyboy72x
    @derbyboy72x 4 месяца назад

    im thinking about getting a 7mm or 7mm prc what would you recommend hunt whitetail around 500-600yds

  • @dakotalucky13
    @dakotalucky13 4 месяца назад

    I recommend led, copper then a tracer.

  • @hxl6162
    @hxl6162 4 месяца назад

    Best regards from the Carnival of Brazil 🎉🎉🎉

  • @jonathanhagen5588
    @jonathanhagen5588 4 месяца назад

    Terminal ballistics within your hunting and comfortable range. All about that bullet performance at the range you are hunting. But you need to know what it does at those ranges.

  • @cody182005
    @cody182005 4 месяца назад

    after a lot of experimenting (moose and black bear)I’m carrying two loads of ammo hunting. I just cant find a bullet that does well at distance and doesn’t blow apart up close.
    Usually i’m running an accubond(original style the LR stuff takes a beating at close range) or a Hornady CX and an eld-x. i focus my zero on the eld load and the close range load is usually close enough to do to 200 yards.
    The hornady CX honestly i think is making big leaps in copper world
    with better BC’s. im a little rotted the 7mm 160 CX needs a 1:8. That thing is on a whole other level. If you had that bullet running warp speed through a big 7 it would tick all boxes for me.

  • @brianowen497
    @brianowen497 24 дня назад

    There is some history here that I think a lot of people don't know regarding Barnes. Years ago they pushed politically for bans on lead bullets. I will never use their bullets for t hat reason alone. When they first came out, they were not accurate at all. I read that they have improved things a bit, but most rifles shoot lead better. They say that they lose less weight when hitting game. So what! That's how lead bullets work. It's about hydrostatic shock as the bullet opens up at high velocity. The mushroom itself doesn't create the wound channel. It's the opening of the mushroom and it speed that creates the shockwave that does the damage as the bullet passes through an animal. Yes, this can be done with all copper as well, but there are other issues. All copper will be a longer bullet for a given weight, thus for stability, a faster twist barrel will be better.
    If you want penetration only with lead, look at a full copper jacket. It won't kill as fast for sure, but will penetrate better than any all copper bullets of the same weight.
    Lastly, look at the Nosler Partition bullet. Most times on big game like elk, the front of the bullet will come apart and create a ton of shock and the rear half will pass all the way through the animal. That bullet is what put John Nosler on the map. I truly believe it's still one of the best hunting bullets ever designed. As for the "safety" of using all copper bullets, really.. I've never heard of a hunter that had lead issues from eating game shot with lead bullets. Lung shots are best anyway. As you might surmise, I'm an older hunter and have been killing game for over 45 years..

  • @nozrep
    @nozrep 4 месяца назад +2

    lead ain’t goin nowhere. I predict. Times are gettin tough. Inflation ongoes ongoingly. People need the cheapest bullets they can find. Lead bullets.

  • @brownbear992
    @brownbear992 4 месяца назад +8

    Hell yeah, let's switch to depleted uranium rounds!

  • @rogerramjet7567
    @rogerramjet7567 5 дней назад +1

    If you’re an ethical HUNTER, you will be shooting at 300 yards or less and Barnes TTSX will expand and be devastating. Accuracy is just superb as well. 👍😀.

  • @jam5287
    @jam5287 4 месяца назад

    The only lead core bullets I have are eld-x bullets. All my other reloading bullets come from Barnes or I occasionally will get the new Hornady CX bullets. They’re closely related to the Barnes TTSX bullets but they’re a little cheaper

  • @whk3834
    @whk3834 4 месяца назад

    I really like copper bullets, I do think we need some innovation though in that area. I've found that I need to drop down in copper bullet weight to find the same accuracy I get in a lead bullet. This adds to the BC issue you guys talked about. I wonder if a lot of people go out and try a copper bullet in the same bullet weight their used to in a lead bullet, get bad accuracy and decide copper bullets are trash. Not realizing that the twist rate of their gun just isnt stabilizing the longer copper bullets as well. Finding some low cost high density material, that is also human and environment friendly seems, to be a stumbling block for innovation here. Norma has a nickel coated tin cored bullet which is interesting but doesn't help in the density or BC arenas. It has a front end that is supposed to fragment and a base that is supposed to stay together for penetration. I haven't shot it yet but am hoping too soon. I think there are a couple companies that are beginning to coat copper bullets in nickel which is supposed to help with some of the copper deposit issues of full copper bullets.

    • @emmanuelcalderon1982
      @emmanuelcalderon1982 4 месяца назад

      Yea copper is lighter than lead so you get bullets the equivalent length as lead core bullets that weigh less. People unfortunately associate the weight of bullets with the twist rate when it’s actually the length of the bullet. I’m sure people will catch on as copper bullets become more popular.

  • @thelastjohnwayne
    @thelastjohnwayne 4 месяца назад

    NOTE Just for target pistol Ammo I would rather use Lead Free Ammo but unfortunately it is harder to find and more expensive. More companies need to start mas producing Lead Free Ammo.

  • @TRoutdooradventures
    @TRoutdooradventures 4 месяца назад

    I used barnes 70 gr tsx 556 on two does last year. Its all about shot placement

  • @diggernash1
    @diggernash1 4 месяца назад

    I have had excellent results with Barnes ttsx in several calibers.

  • @newscoulomb3705
    @newscoulomb3705 Месяц назад

    In terms of lead poisoning, it's mostly about varmints that hunters leave in the field (or game animals that are mortally wounded and are lost). For game that's actually recovered, there's virtually no chance that carrion feeders will get lead poisoning from the gut pile that's left behind.
    As for questioning the source, that's perfectly valid. After all the hullabaloo about lead ammo nearly making the California Condor extinct, it turns out that it was actually California's massive, open-air landfills that were responsible for most California Condor deaths. Don't eat trash, kids.

  • @GumbootsOnBackwards
    @GumbootsOnBackwards 4 месяца назад +4

    Lead ammo cost is significantly less than copper...

    • @southernoregonwaterfowl4092
      @southernoregonwaterfowl4092 4 месяца назад +1

      The average difference (per all .270 win ammo at sportsman’s warehouse) is 4.5 dollars per box or about .20 cents per bullet

    • @8asw8
      @8asw8 4 месяца назад +1

      @@southernoregonwaterfowl4092 For my calibers it is double and I dont shoot cheap lead ammo. So double for laughably worse ammo, not gonna happen

  • @newscoulomb3705
    @newscoulomb3705 Месяц назад

    I'd be interested to see you do a 600+ yard gel test with Barnes LRX. Most copper, monolithic bullets require 2,000+ fps to expand properly, but Barnes claims terminal performance down to ~1,600 fps for the LRX.

  • @jackdundon2261
    @jackdundon2261 4 месяца назад +1

    Humans, we're always trying to build a better mousetrap. The ultimate bullet was made a hell of a long time ago. It's called a nasler partition.

  • @russellfleet7636
    @russellfleet7636 4 месяца назад +2

    If I'm in this heavy timber I don't want copper bullets. I want big wound channel so it's not going to be able to go as far.

  • @Deleted6374
    @Deleted6374 4 месяца назад +1

    Did you delete your last video or did RUclips? The cop vs acorn one. And could you explain the situation?

  • @WisdomMiddleaged
    @WisdomMiddleaged 4 месяца назад +1

    Most people are prepping. Copper doesn't have penetrarion against metal targets. I read somewhere government hunting areas banned lead ammunition because of lead poisoning. I've never heard of lead poisoning from old battlefields.

  • @CHEECHMUN
    @CHEECHMUN 4 месяца назад

    Is copper available for reloading? I've loaded Zinc before.

  • @user-eg8hb8xt3j
    @user-eg8hb8xt3j 4 месяца назад

    My 325 wsm loves the original barns x bullet and it’s been devastating on elk . My 35 Whelen loves the 225 accubond and it’s also devastating on elk lol . Anything bonded or copper is gonna do the job

  • @OldPackMule
    @OldPackMule 4 месяца назад +1

    You're talking about people who shoot 20 rounds for practice and one or two during hunting season. You're NOT considering those who shoot many many more at the range. If the range is managed properly lead is not a problem.

  • @clartro
    @clartro 4 месяца назад +2

    No, lead is superior. Nothing but negative results from anyone I've talked to.

  • @stephenryan2206
    @stephenryan2206 4 месяца назад +1

    Copper is great if you’re in desired velocity so many RUclips videos showing bullets not open under 2000fps

  • @Alden99669
    @Alden99669 Месяц назад

    Up here in Alaska the Barnes TTSX/LRX are very popular. Also the Federal Terminal Accent. You can’t go wrong with either. Don’t cheap out on hunting ammo, the game deserves the best.

  • @WayStedYou
    @WayStedYou 4 месяца назад +10

    With the demand for copper increasing dramatically, I hope not since the price is gonna skyrocket

    • @user-pc7hb9hi9j
      @user-pc7hb9hi9j 4 месяца назад

      the price is actually going down as companies add production capability.

  • @Weatherby406
    @Weatherby406 4 месяца назад +4

    I used um for about 5 years and switched back to lead. They definitely work they just don’t seem to have the same energy dump on game. Punch 2 nice holes but I get more down instantly with lead.

  • @tonymills7883
    @tonymills7883 6 дней назад

    The Barnes and Hammer copper bullets shoot very well.

  • @jmgates09
    @jmgates09 4 месяца назад +2

    I like copper bullets have killed deer with tsx ttsx copper impact no complaints from me but i will not give up lead bullets imo they terminally do better Terminal Ascent and trophy bonded tip A+ accubonds and bond strikes A ttsx are at best a B+ rating haven't killed anything with Lrx and cx yet but have plans to