Nothing else yet beyond coyotes.@SouthPaw is the only person I’ve seen post results on the DRTs. Perhaps he can weigh in if he’s done anything else with them.
6.5 Creedmoor/260 for Deer, Elk, and whatever else.....
Are any of the cup and core traditional deer factory ammo worth a dang in 6.5 cm? Look to set up a new rifle, something 0-300 that's a little bit more cost effective than eldm. The one deer I shoot with bondstrikes barely left any blood. American whitetail? Fusion? I suppose if I've had success...rokslide.com
Does anyone have copper bullets that cause damage similar toa Berger VLD or ELD M? Most of them seem to stay intact and have high weight retention. Looking for DRT kills on whitetail without spraying lead all over the meat
How were they on coyotes? Still seeing evidence of good fragmentation?Nothing else yet beyond coyotes.
I'd say if you want similar wound profile and low velocity performance to Bergers, the DRTs are worth a try. But if you adamantly don't want fragments in tissue, you won't like the DRTs (tungsten/copper fragments instead of lead). You can't have both, unfortunately. Pick your priority.
We take a different approach to terminal performance. Instead of a mushrooming bullet that peels back and creates a single would channel, all of our hollowpoint are designed to shed petals. After 1-2” of penetration, our bullets will shed 4-8 petals (depending on product line and impact velocity). These petals radiate outwards away from the main wound channel while the base continues.
We do not prefer to use the term “fragmenting” because this insinuates that the bullet comes apart into an unpredictable number of numerous tiny pieces. Our bullets are designed to be more controlled with the same number of pieces breaking off every time. We believe that larger petals carry more energy and produce substantial terminal performance in comparison to numerous small pieces.