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Weekly Slug - With J.R. Absher

Ed Friedman

Ah…the Government

Thank goodness the government shut down this threat to humankind.

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Dave Campbell

The Fever

Though we are still in the middle of summer, already a socio-familial malady is building rapidly. For those of you new to the game or for the great unwashed who feel they are above the hunting fray, this malady manifests itself with a general...
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Guy Sagi

New cellulite holster

Can’t afford a holster for concealed carry in your prison cell? Double your mashed potato intake, consume a case of Twinkies a day, develop recipes for rats and threaten your fellow inmates for their cookies until you put on enough weight that you... Read more.....

Not Your Father’s Savage
Chances are your dad has a Savage in his gun vault. It’s probably a Model 99 lever action, although it could be some variation of the Model 110 or Mark II, or—in the case of my dad—a Model 24F 12 gauge/.223 Rem. over-under. But I bet he doesn’t have.....Read more...

Bob Boyd

A Name Change for Legacy’s Sake

Apologies for going off topic. My U.N.C.L.E. Carbine Project blog will continue just as soon as I relay some current news regarding another cool pistol…Read more...

Barnes Varmint Grenade

    Varmint and predator hunters demand a lot from a bullet. Not only must the bullet be uniform in weight and construction and inherently accurate in design, it must also withstand velocities upward of 4,000 feet per second—sometimes higher—without stripping through the core or coming apart before reaching its target. Pest shooters want explosive expansion and limited penetration, while most predator hunters need a bullet that delivers a lethal blow with minimal pelt damage. A bullet capable of fulfilling the needs of both seemed improbable—that is, until Barnes introduced the Varmint Grenade last year.

   The Varmint Grenade is a 36-grain, .224-inch lead-free bullet with a highly frangible, compressed core consisting of a copper and tin composite. The core material is less dense than lead, making the bullet longer than if the latter were used. It approaches the overall length and ballistic coefficient of heavier lead-core bullets, and greatly exceeds those specifications of bullets in the same weight class. A volatile core, combined with a scored, thin jacket, wide meplat and cavernous cavity make the bullet extremely fragile.
      According to Barnes, the Varmint Grenade “vaporizes” ground squirrels and prairie dogs while leaving little or no exit wound on larger animals, such foxes and coyotes. This sounded too good to be true, so I put the new bullet through a host of tests, the first of which was to see its expansion characteristics.
     Shooting a Bullet Test Tube at 10 yards, I discovered the Varmint Grenade began expanding approximately 1⁄4 inch after impact. On animals with relatively thin hides, such as predators, this equates to well inside the chest cavity. Within the first 2 inches of penetration the wound cavity reached maximum diameter, and at 5 inches it closely approximated the diameter of the bullet before upset. A small piece of the base and sidewall penetrated 8 inches.
     To examine on-game performance, I shot several bullets into nuisance beaver carcasses. Regardless of distance or shot angle, the results of the Bullet Test Tube were mimicked—a bullet-diameter entrance hole and no exit. The verdict: When shooting a fox- or coyote-size animal, expect a small entrance hole and little, if any, exit wound. On small varmints the damage should be catastrophic. Barnes’ claims held true.
     The most accurate gun I had on-hand, a Savage Model 12 Long Range Precision Varminter in .22-250 Remington, was used to determine the bullet’s accuracy potential. Hodgdon H380 powder, Federal Gold Medal 210M primers and Remington cases completed the load, and the bullet was seated to give an overall length of 2.350 inches. Working in .1-grain increments of H380 from 38.0 to 41.0 grains, the best accuracy came with 39.5 grains, producing an average velocity of 3,915 feet per second and turning in a five, three-shot-group average of .325 inch at 100 yards.
     For those who do not handload, the Varmint Grenade bullet is also available in .223 Remington by Black Hills Ammunition. This load has a muzzle velocity of 3,750 feet per second.


—Aaron Carter


 

 

 

Barnes Bullets
P.O. Box 215
American Fork, UT 84003
(800) 574-9200
www.barnesbullets.com

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