I'm looking for some info on the effective velocity window and real world bc of the 147 eldm and 156 EOL specifically. I'm not really interested in what ELDMs or bergers of different calibers and/or weights do. Just interested in these two.
What have people seen for real world minimum velocity to still achieve reliable upset on live animals with these two?
What have peoples experience been at impact velocities above 2800 fps?
There is some info floating around about the 147 eldm's having relativelly high bulet-to-bullet bc variation. Is this blown out of proportion? I can't find anything to substantiate this with real world vertical dispersion at long range but it is hard to find any data with relevant sample sizes.
From researching these two bullets there seems to be some info suggesting the 156 EOL may not reliably open/fragment/tumble (whatever a berger does) within a resonable distance (<6") as velocities approach the 2000 fps range. Is this a valid concern? There are lots of examples of the 156 working very well on game at various ranges but most of those examples would still be above 2200 fps. I can't find many/any examples at the lower limit.
On the 147 eldm there are some complaints of the bullet "splashing", "blowing up" or otherwise failing to penetrate at high impact velocities. Any validity to this? I have a hard time believing a 147 grain projectile would just "blow up" and would fail to penetrate to vitals, even at 3k fps, yet there are examples of guys claiming this has happened to them (no pictures though).
I'm trying to determine, as best as possible, which 6.5mm bullet will likely achieve the furthest effective range (reliably) while still functioning at point blank range. The info that's out there seems to be all over the place but generally suggests that with a starting velocity 50 fps faster for the ELDM these two bullets will reach 1800 fps at similar distances (slightly higher real world bc on the berger), the 147 eldm should function down to 1700 fps while it's probably best to keep the berger above 2000 fps, and both will work at close range but the eldm will likelly make a bigger mess if hitting shoulders. Sound about right?
What have people seen for real world minimum velocity to still achieve reliable upset on live animals with these two?
What have peoples experience been at impact velocities above 2800 fps?
There is some info floating around about the 147 eldm's having relativelly high bulet-to-bullet bc variation. Is this blown out of proportion? I can't find anything to substantiate this with real world vertical dispersion at long range but it is hard to find any data with relevant sample sizes.
From researching these two bullets there seems to be some info suggesting the 156 EOL may not reliably open/fragment/tumble (whatever a berger does) within a resonable distance (<6") as velocities approach the 2000 fps range. Is this a valid concern? There are lots of examples of the 156 working very well on game at various ranges but most of those examples would still be above 2200 fps. I can't find many/any examples at the lower limit.
On the 147 eldm there are some complaints of the bullet "splashing", "blowing up" or otherwise failing to penetrate at high impact velocities. Any validity to this? I have a hard time believing a 147 grain projectile would just "blow up" and would fail to penetrate to vitals, even at 3k fps, yet there are examples of guys claiming this has happened to them (no pictures though).
I'm trying to determine, as best as possible, which 6.5mm bullet will likely achieve the furthest effective range (reliably) while still functioning at point blank range. The info that's out there seems to be all over the place but generally suggests that with a starting velocity 50 fps faster for the ELDM these two bullets will reach 1800 fps at similar distances (slightly higher real world bc on the berger), the 147 eldm should function down to 1700 fps while it's probably best to keep the berger above 2000 fps, and both will work at close range but the eldm will likelly make a bigger mess if hitting shoulders. Sound about right?