Best value .224 bullets for reloading in a trainer 223 bolt action

AZ Gator

Lil-Rokslider
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Apr 10, 2025
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Hey folks. Curious what folks like to use for volume loading in a 223 rifle as a trainer? Terminal ballistics are irrelevant, but BC is worth considering. A bullet known for being forgiving/do well in nearly all rifles is what I’d like to find.

Spending $0.45/bullet for Berger and others seems unnecessary. It seems Matchburner and a couple others can be found for about $0.30/bullet, which is a good price difference.

Thanks!
 
Honest answer is the ones that shoot best. Price be damned. Nobody wants to shoot 2” groups when an extra dime a shot means better.

Even better answer, the bullet tha also kills things well. Nothing like wasting bench and range time re zeroing, re confirming and re gathering data for a bullet you decided to save 5 cents a piece on, then doing the same when it’s time to put them in meat with your expensive bullets.

Ideally, if they shoot well, I’d buy 5000 tmk, 16lbs of powder, 500 pieces of brass and 5k primers. That would allow you to actually track your setup, keep it in a state of readiness, and have data that gets more and more solid over time. That is how confidence is built.
 
I’ve been thinking about the 85 Matchburner.
Actually curious about what it would do on game.
 
Thanks for the replies. I understand the viewpoint of shooting bullets that are also good for hunting.

But, this rifle is for training. In the example of buying 5k worth of components, there’s over $1,000 extra spent on bullets when 99.9% (reality is likely 100%) of the bullets will be used on paper and steel. So the cost of a new rifle is spent on more capable bullets for a use case that isn’t very beneficial.

That’s a convoluted way of me saying it still seems like a “value” bullet appears to be the best use of funds and time for a training rifle. If we were talking a barrel/cartridge that lasts 500-1000 rounds, that might be a different story.

There doesn’t seem to be much consensus on a “forgiving” bullet for loading.

Factory seconds are an interesting option for cost, but I do wonder how consistency may go with them.
 
I snag 75gr amax/elds whenever they pop up. Always paid around $0.20/per.

They did a run on 62gr btsp's a while back. Stocked up hard on those :cool:

If I wanted cheap long rangish bullets. I'd be lookin for 68-75gr bthp's. Otherwise stock up on whatever 55-60ish gr sp is on sale.
 
AZ, it seems most any reputable bullet manufacturer will be fine with a bullet weight that will stabilize well in whatever the twist is in the barrel you get.

I've long been a fan of Sierra bullets, but i'm part fud :)
 
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