.223 for bear, deer, elk and moose.

Rolltide

FNG
Joined
Jun 19, 2016
Messages
28
If I remember correctly it was said they work similarly but with less penetration. I believe multiple people are using them in 9 twist barrels. 77s are definitely the preferred weight but I understand 69 are more available.
Thank you for that info!

I guess my wife is correct when she says I can't remember anything!
 

FCCDerek

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 15, 2020
Messages
151
Location
North Idaho
If I remember correctly it was said they work similarly but with less penetration. I believe multiple people are using them in 9 twist barrels. 77s are definitely the preferred weight but I understand 69 are more available.
I've killed quite a few deer with 69gr rounds. Wasn't the TMK, but it killed them without issue.
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2024
Messages
6
Found these recently. Can't find anything listed for sale in the country (Canada) for 77gr TMK's so I put up a WTB add on a classifieds site and someone came through. Miracles do happen sometimes I guess.
 

Attachments

  • 20240417_164725.jpg
    20240417_164725.jpg
    262.3 KB · Views: 104

Moose83

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 30, 2020
Messages
219
Found these recently. Can't find anything listed for sale in the country (Canada) for 77gr TMK's so I put up a WTB add on a classifieds site and someone came through. Miracles do happen sometimes I guess.
That is definitely a unicorn up here...
 

Tahr

FNG
Joined
Dec 13, 2018
Messages
84
Location
New Zealand
Man oh man I finally finished all 348 pages of this one. Main takeaway is you guys are shooting animals with big magnums and pretending to use the 77tmk cause you have stock options with sierra.

Side note I did buy some and now I gotta pick a 223 out.
You dont have to be a slave to Tikka. There are lots of good .223's out there although slightly limited if you want a 1:8 twist (which you will need for the 75-80 grn class of projectiles). Fit and feel is important and the best might not be a Tikka.
 

FCCDerek

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 15, 2020
Messages
151
Location
North Idaho
You dont have to be a slave to Tikka. There are lots of good .223's out there although slightly limited if you want a 1:8 twist (which you will need for the 75-80 grn class of projectiles). Fit and feel is important and the best might not be a Tikka.
Yeah, Tikkas are great but they're not the ONLY option. Lots of good ones. Though I caught some shit for it, the new Remington 700's with the 16.5" threaded barrel and Timney trigger can be found for a great deal. It's a 1-8" twist 5R barrel and shoots lights out. If only Tikka made a factory threaded barrel 223 with a 16"-18" barrel. That would be awesome.
 

Spoonbill

WKR
Joined
Jan 15, 2020
Messages
709
Yeah, Tikkas are great but they're not the ONLY option. Lots of good ones. Though I caught some shit for it, the new Remington 700's with the 16.5" threaded barrel and Timney trigger can be found for a great deal. It's a 1-8" twist 5R barrel and shoots lights out. If only Tikka made a factory threaded barrel 223 with a 16"-18" barrel. That would be awesome.

Looks like they do.
 

ElPollo

WKR
Joined
Aug 31, 2018
Messages
1,115
Yeah, Tikkas are great but they're not the ONLY option. Lots of good ones. Though I caught some shit for it, the new Remington 700's with the 16.5" threaded barrel and Timney trigger can be found for a great deal. It's a 1-8" twist 5R barrel and shoots lights out. If only Tikka made a factory threaded barrel 223 with a 16"-18" barrel. That would be awesome.
Tikkas aren’t the only option, but they are the most reliable and smoothest option under a grand. Tikka triggers and barrels are also generally better than anything else in their price range. But I hear you on having to cut and thread. My local smith’s charge for that work went up 30% over the last couple of years. A factory 18” threaded barrel for suppressors would make my day.

PNWG’s intent was in the right place with his comments to you on R700s, even if the delivery was coarse. They can be accurate guns, but they have design issues with the trigger that can make them less reliable and less safe in the field. And changing the trigger to a aftermarket model doesn’t fix those issues. If you hunt with one of these guns, it’s best to carry them with an empty chamber and to try your best to keep dirt, debris, water and ice from getting into the action. You can search for this info here on Rokslide and another places. Not saying it’s a bad gun, but R700s and their clones definitely have their limitations.
 

Tallest

FNG
Joined
Feb 12, 2024
Messages
9
Location
Shenandoah Valley
I also think it's important to note that, at least how I read it, PNWG's statement was simultaneously addressing the R700 and the Hammers. To me, the hammer was the more critical deviation from the Rokslide-special-shooting-77GrTMKs concept.
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
Joined
Oct 22, 2019
Messages
4,272
Location
Central Arizona
You dont have to be a slave to Tikka. There are lots of good .223's out there although slightly limited if you want a 1:8 twist (which you will need for the 75-80 grn class of projectiles). Fit and feel is important and the best might not be a Tikka.
Not really in my experience at all.

For me, when looking at a rifle, I observe 3 things in order of importance to me... Long term reliability, long term repeatability, and accuracy throughout the life of the barrel. Nothing really comes close to Sako and Tikka rifles in my use cases.

I've never owned a custom gun that performed any better in these categories and I've owned around 30 of them from a few different builders. Same goes with factory rifles of (pick your brand).
 

FCCDerek

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 15, 2020
Messages
151
Location
North Idaho
Tikkas aren’t the only option, but they are the most reliable and smoothest option under a grand. Tikka triggers and barrels are also generally better than anything else in their price range. But I hear you on having to cut and thread. My local smith’s charge for that work went up 30% over the last couple of years. A factory 18” threaded barrel for suppressors would make my day.

PNWG’s intent was in the right place with his comments to you on R700s, even if the delivery was coarse. They can be accurate guns, but they have design issues with the trigger that can make them less reliable and less safe in the field. And changing the trigger to a aftermarket model doesn’t fix those issues. If you hunt with one of these guns, it’s best to carry them with an empty chamber and to try your best to keep dirt, debris, water and ice from getting into the action. You can search for this info here on Rokslide and another places. Not saying it’s a bad gun, but R700s and their clones definitely have their limitations.
What you said holds true for every rifle. Keep stuff out of the action and the trigger if you want optimal performance and guaranteed function. Don't adjust the trigger down to a hairs breadth of trigger pull, and take care of your gear. I've used Remington 700's and their clones my entire life without issue. Yes, I've read the articles on failures that have happened and those are unfortunate, if not entirely repeatable assuming you're taking care of your equipment. I feel like if they were as huge a deal as they're made out to be there wouldn't be countless manufacturers copying their design and selling tons of them. I've knocked my remingtons and clones around a fair amount trying to simulate the issues I've heard of with nothing happening. It was loaded with a dummy round, with a live primer, and sand instead of powder. That being said I'm not going to fill the action with debris, or ice or anything else to test it. Nor would I try and run it if it got packed full of stuff in the field. I'd clean it out first.
 
Top