benconfused
WKR
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2025
- Messages
- 382
Any guesstimations on BC for the 107 TMKs?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
i would imagine just a little better than the 107 SMKAny guesstimations on BC for the 107 TMKs?
Black hills was loading it for a bit. You can still get 308 readily, haven’t looked for any other cartridges.Besides the 77tmk, Does anyone besides boutique outlets and Fed LEO load TMK in factory form?
Federal has a 110 tipped fusion coming, not sure they’d load the 107 with a sierra bullet but options would be nice
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Form, just to clarify...are you saying the variable behavior of some ELD-Ms include impacts above 2,000 fps or primarily below 2,000 fps?



given these factors - is the ELD-M still a >1800FPS bullet in your mind? Or have you revised your minimum velocity for it based on what you’ve seen as of late?It gets worse below 2,200’ish, but happens above it as well at times.
You can see why here:
View attachment 983270
View attachment 983271
The ELD-M have long slender/pointy ogive (some more than others), a tiny nose opening compared to TMK’s and smaller than ELD-X’s, and the jacket is thicker at the front portion of the bullet. Lead surrounds the shaft of the tip nearly all the way to the top, and the tip itself in the ELD-M (and X) is brittle and tends to break off right at the nose as below (168gr ELD-M left, AMAX, 178gr ELD-X right).
View attachment 983286
All of that put together, if one understands how bullets upset, it shouldn’t be hard to see how you can get a weird one that the tip breaks off, the nose pinches over just a bit- and you are left with what is functionally an FMJ. This also tracks with impact velocity as the issue seems to show the most below 2,200’ish.
Again- this isn’t to say that ELD-M’s are “bad”. All bullets have variability- lots/most hunting bullets do the same thing at a higher rate- hence the reason that I generally don’t use “hunting” bullets. Just that the ELD-M’s show a behavior that AMAX’s did not, and overall are usually not nearly as destructive as AMAX were. There is a price to pay for super aggressive ogives and the highest BC and harder tips that don’t melt. This is why Ryan and I were adamant that the heavy 6mm specifically, but all the new TMK’s don’t chase the absolute edge of possible BC- just make them decent and keep the construction the same.
given these factors - is the ELD-M still a >1800FPS bullet in your mind? Or have you revised your minimum velocity for it based on what you’ve seen as of late?
Those cutout pictures definitely help explain your theory why higher BC's sometimes lead to more inconsistent wounds. The sleeker portion and tip above the ogive sure seems like it would be more prone to failed expansion than the more "chunky" TMK just by appearance.It gets worse below 2,200’ish, but happens above it as well at times.
You can see why here:
View attachment 983270
View attachment 983271
The ELD-M have long slender/pointy ogive (some more than others), a tiny nose opening compared to TMK’s and smaller than ELD-X’s, and the jacket is thicker at the front portion of the bullet. Lead surrounds the shaft of the tip nearly all the way to the top, and the tip itself in the ELD-M (and X) is brittle and tends to break off right at the nose as below (168gr ELD-M left, AMAX, 178gr ELD-X right).
View attachment 983286
All of that put together, if one understands how bullets upset, it shouldn’t be hard to see how you can get a weird one that the tip breaks off, the nose pinches over just a bit- and you are left with what is functionally an FMJ. This also tracks with impact velocity as the issue seems to show the most below 2,200’ish.
Again- this isn’t to say that ELD-M’s are “bad”. All bullets have variability- lots/most hunting bullets do the same thing at a higher rate- hence the reason that I generally don’t use “hunting” bullets. Just that the ELD-M’s show a behavior that AMAX’s did not, and overall are usually not nearly as destructive as AMAX were. There is a price to pay for super aggressive ogives and the highest BC and harder tips that don’t melt. This is why Ryan and I were adamant that the heavy 6mm specifically, but all the new TMK’s don’t chase the absolute edge of possible BC- just make them decent and keep the construction the same.
i would imagine just a little better than the 107 SMK
And make more than 3,000 every 4 years so people can actually acquire themjust make them decent and keep the construction the same.
Fair enough. This is the first year I had an elk run immediately upon impact, almost like someone whacked him in the ass with a board. Combined with a shitty ELDM performance, and the only thing that allowed me to recover that elk within a couple hundred yards was shot placement (referring to the bull with the narrow wound I sent you photos of specifically). I don’t have a ton of experience compared to many on here, but typically I shoot until they’re down and have always had the opportunity to put at least two in. It seems like the chances of two ELD’s performing that way back to back are near zero, though obviously that risk increases as you move closer to 1800FPS.Yes- because it really isn’t so much that the bullets need more to upset, it’s that the design causes them to be more variable at medium to lower impact speeds. That’s true for most bullets. I just expect when I shoot, to shoot the animal multiple times regardless of caliber/cartridge/bullet. Lots of times I don’t, sometimes I do.
But also, because everything starts getting weirder at times at lower impact velocities, my general procedure is 1-2 in the chest that I know are solid chest hits, then the next goes in the neck to break it down. Bullets do weird things at times, and each animal is different- animals have their Medal of Honor earners too.
This is where I was leaning initially, and then some voice in my head said cut another 2" off and run 16". Unfortunately, that doesn't quite make 1,800fps at 600 (1,758fps @ 5k DA, 35F) and I don't want to "step on it" in the name of barrel life and accuracy.I really want to try a moderately sized 6mm like maybe a 6CM or 6GT of maybe 18".
I bought my kid a 20" tikka this summer. The stock is a hair short - youth length - but it has the longer-than-needed Tikka action, then a 20" barrel, and a can that's maybe 5.25". This rifle isn't 'short' in a treestand, certainly isn't 'short' when slung and walking through the woods, but it isn't terrible, either.This is where I was leaning initially, and then some voice in my head said cut another 2" off and run 16". Unfortunately, that doesn't quite make 1,800fps at 600 (1,758fps @ 5k DA, 35F) and I don't want to "step on it" in the name of barrel life and accuracy.
So I sold myself on a 16" 25 creed that could push 134 eld-M's out to 600. However...now that there's a 107 TMK option coming out, I feel better letting that get to 1,750fps if I absolutely had to*.
Or...I could just run an 18" barrel. Analysis paralysis is driving me nuts, but it costs less than buying a 16" 25 creed and an 18" 6 creed/GT.
I bought my kid a 20" tikka this summer. The stock is a hair short - youth length - but it has the longer-than-needed Tikka action, then a 20" barrel, and a can that's maybe 5.25". This rifle isn't 'short' in a treestand, certainly isn't 'short' when slung and walking through the woods, but it isn't terrible, either.
So I figure that if I built an 18" short action (like R700 or similar, and a Remington model 7 is within the realm of possibility) and put a reflex can on it that's only 4" out front, that would make it *maybe* 3" shorter than the Tikka I'm using as a reference.