Best All Copper Cartridge for Whitetail Deer for a Tikka T3x 6.5 Creedmoor?

Joined
Dec 14, 2021
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Location
Sandpoint, Idaho
Hi Folks,

I am looking for recommendations on a cartridge with 100% copper bullet to use for white tail deer in my wife's Tikka T3x 6.5 Creedmoor. She has been using Sako Super Hammerhead cartridges with great luck the past couple years, but would like to switch to an all copper bullet.

I would appreciate hearing any of your recommendations!

-Tim
 

sndmn11

WKR
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Mar 28, 2017
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Morrison, Colorado

I'd shoot the Barnes 120
 

Macintosh

WKR
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Feb 17, 2018
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2,003
Ive had good luck with barnes ttsx in 7mm08 120’s. This fall used 6.5mb federal trophy copper 120 on an antelope—sample of one and it worked as advertised and shot well out of my gun. I would definitely try barnes lrx in 6.5 if you can find them.
 

Rangerpants

Lil-Rokslider
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Apr 9, 2020
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142
Location
Really Northern California
TTSX bullets are great. I've shot probably more than 35 deer, elk, pigs, bears, antelope, and a few coyotes and javelina and never had a bullet-related issue. They penetrate like gangbusters, but need speed to open up. If you keep your impact speeds over 2000fps, they work great!
 

peaches

Lil-Rokslider
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Dec 14, 2019
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148
127 LRX will expand down to at least 1800 fps in my tests. Great bullet.
 
Joined
Nov 20, 2021
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In any case until he comes back again there's not going to be more information, it's been 10 days.
 

godwinmt

FNG
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Sep 13, 2021
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I've had great luck this year with Hornady Outfitters with the 120gr GMX out of my Bergara. 1/2-3/4 MOA @ 200 yards, and still expands plenty on the closer shots. Shot 2 does with it this year at 80 and 150 yards respectively. Minimal meat loss (right behind the scapula on both), and both were down inside of 20 yards.

As the outfitters are getting hard to find, I've got a box of TTSX to try after the end of season. Hoping for good things with it.

You're definitely making the right move with copper. Working on getting my wife switched over. She's been using the Hornady whitetail rounds, and while they kill (I think she's killed close to a dozen with them), they fragment inside of 100 yards like nobody's business out of her 6.5, and you're lucky to salvage much of atleast one, if not both shoulders.
 

Soloften

FNG
Joined
Jan 10, 2022
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I smoked a pronghorn at 287 with a 120 gr superformance (GMX), no steps, just down. Funnily enough, it's my "wife's" rifle although she has never taken a shot. I wholeheartedly endorse both men and women owning a 6.5 and not simply (as I am) hiding behind a spouse.
 
Joined
Nov 20, 2021
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Thanks for the thread resurrection, hope the OP saw the info folks posted.

.277 110 TTSX 270 Win- pronghorn and elk.
.308 130 TTSX out of an '06 has done the same.
.308 180 XBT (original X boattail version) 300 Win Mag- mule deer and elk. This was the first cartridge I loaded with them.
.284 160X, 150 XBT 280 Remington- elk and whitetails.
.358 200X, 225X, 250X and 200 TTSX 35 Whelen AI- more than a few elk, mule deer and whitetails over the past 22 seasons.

Lead is gonna go by the wayside sooner than later. Wasn't thinking that way back in the day, as the Barnes X worked so dang well I didn't need another option to my simple mind. Not sure if I was an "early adopter" of the Barnes X, but started loading them in 1993. Ya'll could start loading them now and in 30 years have a good sampling to post up about. ;)
 

mattot

FNG
Joined
Feb 4, 2024
Messages
13
Ive had good luck with barnes ttsx in 7mm08 120’s. This fall used 6.5mb federal trophy copper 120 on an antelope—sample of one and it worked as advertised and shot well out of my gun. I would definitely try barnes lrx in 6.5 if you can find them.
Glad to hear this, just picked up some for my 7mm-08.
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2024
Messages
44
Location
Wisconsin
Different calibers but hope this data helps:
Federal trophy copper 165g 300wsm: 3 deer, 2 dropped in tracks, one made two bounds and done
Hornady CX 165g 300 wsm: 4 deer all dead on impact
Hornady GMX (CX now but very similar) 165g 30:06: 1 deer dead on impact

Hoping to test out some 175g Barnes LRX and 165g TTSX this season. My .308 I use 165g trophy copper and taking my 6.5x55 out with 120g Hornady CX bullets next year.

I have found with personal experience with whitetail (all shots 10 yards to 200) the copper provides more shock to the deer and less meat damage than lead. Never tracked a deer with a copper bullet. All but one bullet full pass through. The one recovered was hard quartering to and found perfect mushroom in back ball joint.
 

EmperorMA

WKR
Joined
Dec 7, 2018
Messages
516
If the Winchester Copper Impact 125gr shoots well in the rifle, that is what I would run. That bullet expands better than other copper bullets which makes it a very good choice for deer. It opens quickly, does a ton of damage because of it then usually leaves a very nice exit wound.
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2024
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So question to all of the folks giving advice here, I have been reading and reading and reading... seems like paralysis by analysis (and an overwhelming amount of different input) is real.
My understanding is that a copper bullet needs more velocity to properly expand.
With my simple thinking... If I shoot a whitetail within 50-100-150 yards with a 6.5 CM, the velocity will be MORE than enough to hit with authority, expand properly, exit (most likely), and in theory have a DRT deer, with little fragmentation/bloodshot meat. Or am I missing something here?

Looking to switch to all copper myself, mostly hunting in GA so shots under 150 yards, unless I'm in a field.

Looking at Hornady GMX (CX now I think), Barnes TTSX, and LRX (in another mag for those longer shots). Maybe Nosler eTip.
 

Macintosh

WKR
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
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2,003
Youre not missing anything except that DRT isnt a guarantee with any cartridge, big or small, copper or lead, traditional expanding or fragmenting. If you can settle for “good kills”, then you are right on the money—inside 250 yards (and probably much further) this is all close-enough to a wash to not worry about.
I would also not worry about ttsx and lrx in different mags, just pick one and use it. There is zero down-side to the lrx at closer range, if it shoots well just run it, its the best of the three imo. Any $ savings will be offset by buying 2 different cartridges. They wont shoot to the same poi anyway.
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2024
Messages
35
Youre not missing anything except that DRT isnt a guarantee with any cartridge, big or small, copper or lead, traditional expanding or fragmenting. If you can settle for “good kills”, then you are right on the money—inside 250 yards (and probably much further) this is all close-enough to a wash to not worry about.
I would also not worry about ttsx and lrx in different mags, just pick one and use it. There is zero down-side to the lrx at closer range, if it shoots well just run it, its the best of the three imo. Any $ savings will be offset by buying 2 different cartridges. They wont shoot to the same poi anyway.
where were you with this info for the past 2 days haha

much appreciated!!!
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2024
Messages
35
Youre not missing anything except that DRT isnt a guarantee with any cartridge, big or small, copper or lead, traditional expanding or fragmenting. If you can settle for “good kills”, then you are right on the money—inside 250 yards (and probably much further) this is all close-enough to a wash to not worry about.
I would also not worry about ttsx and lrx in different mags, just pick one and use it. There is zero down-side to the lrx at closer range, if it shoots well just run it, its the best of the three imo. Any $ savings will be offset by buying 2 different cartridges. They wont shoot to the same poi anyway.
Is there such thing with these coppers as... too close? too much velocity?
 
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