🤠 Did You Know That With The 80 grain and 85 grain Monolithic Solid Bullets From Your 270 Winchester, You Can Get Between 3,800 ft/s and 3,900 ft/s Velocity Out of The Muzzle? 🔥
When a .270 cartridge and the .270 rifle is set up and operating as it should, you pretty much do not need a magnum cartridge. It is more than adequate.
🤠 Did You Know That With a 110 grain Barnes TTSX or Nosler Accubond and Norma 204 Powder (See Their Reloading Website Data) You Can Get 3,500 ft/s From Your 270 Winchester! So, Sighted in at 350 yards, You Will Be Roughly +/- 4.5" All The Way Out to 400 yards and Only -15" of Drop at 500 yards! 🔥
🤠 Did You Know That With The 130 grain Nosler Ballistics Tip, Their Are Multiple Powders That Will Get You Velocities of Between 3,200 ft/s and 3,250 ft/s? 🔥
As long as you have enough barrel to burn the fuel, and choose the proper fuel, a .270 Winchester really is a magnum class cartridge. I'm not a real fan of 130 grain bullets, or excessively fragile bullets. So much hunting is at such short range where fast stepping fragile bullets are just too hard on the carcass too often. Excess carcass damage doesn't really kill them any deader or significantly faster than adequate damage. Tougher bullets and lower speeds are more appropriate down in the woods and at abbreviated distances. Meat hunters that process their own deer learn this quickly.
🤠 Did You Know That "Unknown Munitions" (From Post Falls, Idaho) Has Factory 270 Winchester Ammunition Loads Available in the 165 grain Nosler ABLR Bonded Bullets With A Velocity of 2,925 Ft/s? 🔥
🤠 Did You Know That Double Tap Ammunition (Cedar City, Utah) Reloads 180 Grain Bonded Woodleigh Weldcore Bullets For The 270 Winchester? But, If You Reload Your Own, Their Are Several Powders That Will Get You Over 2,800 ft/s With This Bullet! 🔥
Great video. Thanks for the message too.
Awesome!
The venerable 270!
🤠 Did You Know That With The 80 grain and 85 grain Monolithic Solid Bullets From Your 270 Winchester, You Can Get Between 3,800 ft/s and 3,900 ft/s Velocity Out of The Muzzle? 🔥
When a .270 cartridge and the .270 rifle is set up and operating as it should, you pretty much do not need a magnum cartridge. It is more than adequate.
The magnum before the magnum.
🤠 Did You Know That With a 110 grain Barnes TTSX or Nosler Accubond and Norma 204 Powder (See Their Reloading Website Data) You Can Get 3,500 ft/s From Your 270 Winchester! So, Sighted in at 350 yards, You Will Be Roughly +/- 4.5" All The Way Out to 400 yards and Only -15" of Drop at 500 yards! 🔥
🤠 Did You Know That With The 130 grain Nosler Ballistics Tip, Their Are Multiple Powders That Will Get You Velocities of Between 3,200 ft/s and 3,250 ft/s? 🔥
As long as you have enough barrel to burn the fuel, and choose the proper fuel, a .270 Winchester really is a magnum class cartridge. I'm not a real fan of 130 grain bullets, or excessively fragile bullets. So much hunting is at such short range where fast stepping fragile bullets are just too hard on the carcass too often. Excess carcass damage doesn't really kill them any deader or significantly faster than adequate damage. Tougher bullets and lower speeds are more appropriate down in the woods and at abbreviated distances. Meat hunters that process their own deer learn this quickly.
🤠 Did You Know That "Unknown Munitions" (From Post Falls, Idaho) Has Factory 270 Winchester Ammunition Loads Available in the 165 grain Nosler ABLR Bonded Bullets With A Velocity of 2,925 Ft/s? 🔥
🤠 Did You Know That Double Tap Ammunition (Cedar City, Utah) Reloads 180 Grain Bonded Woodleigh Weldcore Bullets For The 270 Winchester? But, If You Reload Your Own, Their Are Several Powders That Will Get You Over 2,800 ft/s With This Bullet! 🔥
why I need "one" - lol, man I have about nine 270s.
.270 man and a Christian… amen!