I think you're pretty spot on @
Mooseman. Over the years I've taken several fallow and yearling reds with the 243 and the relatively soft 100gr Prohunter between 350 and 400 yards, all from the exact same spot. 389 yards (356m) is the longest from memory. Thats an impact velocity of ~1970fps.
That spot will deliver again and again, and the beauty of it is that I am always shooting from the same position with a very light breeze directly from behind me. I've got that spot pretty much worked out.
Now I know from my drop the testing of this cartridge and low-ish BC ProHunter that once I pass 400
metres, it starts to get very iffy and accuracy turns to shit. That's at about 1875fps. It's really dropping by this point, so my limit on my 243 is pretty much 350-360m, assuming no wind.
My 6.5 Creedmoor is only starting to warm up at that range. The annoying thing for me is that when I am carrying my .243 I often see goats that are just out of range, and I wish I had my Creedmoor, but my Creedmoor is (quite deliberately) a heavy medium range shooter, not a carry rifle. When I walk in to the hills I carry it on a double sling...
So.. the point of this waffle. The 90gr ELD-X will break the 1875fps mark at about
500m. A full 100m longer than the ProHunter. So even with the slight drop in weight its high BC does the job. That potentially fills a nice gap in my regular shooting - if after drop testing and proving sub-MOA accuracy (I get between 0.7-0.8MOA at 300m with the ProHunter on a still day) I'll be all over those further goats. According to the technician at Hornady who emailed me back, the 90 grain bullet should reliably expand and partially fragment at 1800fps. Anyway, that's why I'm interested in the 90gr ELD-X.
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