Originally Posted By: DAAI don't think anything changed. Vmax have always been lousy bullets for coyote. Since the day they hit the market.
- DAA
While my friend Nate and I were doing some load testing with our suppressors, we noticed that the Vmax's wouldn't group well at all. Initially we thought that we might have a scope issue, but when we switched to SP's or HP's, the groups were nice and tight. So we began looking into the cause. I had no problems with Vmax's for years. They shot great, grouped fine and I had no problems putting down coyotes. But when we started investigating we found a vast difference in the weights from bullet to bullet. The SP's, HP's and other manufacturers were with in +/- .1-.2 grain. But the Vmax's were all over the place. Heavy, light, and BIG differences, like .5gr or more. That tells me someting is wrong with their quality control if not their manufacturing. Then they started pushing them faster and faster, which would just magnify the problem. It's not at all what you would expect from a top shelf manufacturer.
Here is a sight in target that I shot, with .223 Vmax's, at 100 yards out of my 16in bull barrel .223. The group to the right is my test group. The string is after my windage adjustment, and each shot has an elevation adjustment thrown in. So they used to be accurate enough to dial in on. On our most recent test, we couldn't do better than 1.5in at 100 yards.
223 sight in 100 yard sight in by Jason Mosler, on Flickr
- DAA
While my friend Nate and I were doing some load testing with our suppressors, we noticed that the Vmax's wouldn't group well at all. Initially we thought that we might have a scope issue, but when we switched to SP's or HP's, the groups were nice and tight. So we began looking into the cause. I had no problems with Vmax's for years. They shot great, grouped fine and I had no problems putting down coyotes. But when we started investigating we found a vast difference in the weights from bullet to bullet. The SP's, HP's and other manufacturers were with in +/- .1-.2 grain. But the Vmax's were all over the place. Heavy, light, and BIG differences, like .5gr or more. That tells me someting is wrong with their quality control if not their manufacturing. Then they started pushing them faster and faster, which would just magnify the problem. It's not at all what you would expect from a top shelf manufacturer.
Here is a sight in target that I shot, with .223 Vmax's, at 100 yards out of my 16in bull barrel .223. The group to the right is my test group. The string is after my windage adjustment, and each shot has an elevation adjustment thrown in. So they used to be accurate enough to dial in on. On our most recent test, we couldn't do better than 1.5in at 100 yards.
223 sight in 100 yard sight in by Jason Mosler, on Flickr