If it is a 1:7 or 1:8, pretty good.What are the odds of the 77 TMKs being able to stabilize in a factory barreled Remington Model Seven 223?
If it is a 1:7 or 1:8, pretty good.
It’s gonna be 1:9 or 1:12. I’ll have to measure it to be sure. None, however, were offered in a 1:7 or 1:8 twist.
I have only shot them (77tmk) at 100 yds so far, but in two 1:9 rifles accuracy was very good. Even tried them in a 1:10 rifle and shot a .75 10 shot group??It’s gonna be 1:9 or 1:12. I’ll have to measure it to be sure. None, however, were offered in a 1:7 or 1:8 twist.
I have only shot them (77tmk) at 100 yds so far, but in two 1:9 rifles accuracy was very good. Even tried them in a 1:10 rifle and shot a .75 10 shot group??
Killed a deer with one of the 1:9 guns. Seemed to perform as expected. 100yds
Am I the only leftie having a terrible time finding a LH .223 T3X non-CTR? Or is CTR the only LH option for a .223?
If its the weight that is scaring you...I got the 20" lefty CTR, removed the 0moa rail and replaced the bottom metal with T3 bottom plus a waters mag. These mods shaved a lot of weight. With a SWFA 3-9 in Sportsmatch rings it's 8.8 pounds with great balance and easy to carry hunting.Am I the only leftie having a terrible time finding a LH .223 T3X non-CTR? Or is CTR the only LH option for a .223?
I hate to say it and state the obvious, but with the prevelance of tikka take off parts and great prefits from 1/2 dozen companies your an afternoon away from turning that ctr into an ultralight.Am I the only leftie having a terrible time finding a LH .223 T3X non-CTR? Or is CTR the only LH option for a .223?
I hate to say it and state the obvious, but with the prevelance of tikka take off parts and great prefits from 1/2 dozen companies your an afternoon away from turning that ctr into an ultralight.
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Nope, impossible to find. I did get the CTR lefty, got the swfa 3-9 and it is an absolute hoot to shoot.Am I the only leftie having a terrible time finding a LH .223 T3X non-CTR? Or is CTR the only LH option for a .223?
I saw a picture earlier in the thread where the TMK left a 4"+ hole in the ribs. It's pretty amazing that a little .223 bullet can cause such carnage.That gaping hole in the rib cage. Oof. Not gonna recover.
Just out of curiosity, was the heart directly in the path of the TMK?Well I took my first deer with the 223 and 77 TMK combo last night.
Results were on par with what has been proven in this thread.
I took a shot on a whitetail from a treestand. Deer was roughly 100 yards and very close to broad side with his front leg/shoulder back covering his vitals. My shot was right on the money. Broke the shoulder and destroyed the onside lung, with heavy fragmentation taking out the heart as well. No exit wound but a few small holes in the cavity from fragments. Under the offside shoulder against the ribs had some blood shot as well.
Deer had a classic jumping reaction and ran 15 yards then stopped for a few seconds. He then turned around took 3 steps fell over and expired within seconds.
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Gun:
Ruger Ranch 5.56
Load:
77 TMK
23.5 grains of 8208 XBR
Nosler Brass
CCI BR-4 primers
COAL 2.260
A big thanks to all the positive contributors to this thread.
My entry looked to be higher than center heart so the damage must have been from a large fragment.Just out of curiosity, was the heart directly in the path of the TMK?