Dark moon 63
New member
The VT sounded interesting but the BC is 395. The 75 ELDM is 467. I lost interest in the VT.
Hornady screwed the pooch on the first couple of lots of their factory ammo because of that. A lot of non reloaders had to send ammo back because it wouldn't chamber.Originally Posted By: Kino MOriginally Posted By: arlaunchTheir podcast says the new ELD-VT bullets are light for length. I don't remember how they are making 75 grain length bullets made of lead, coming in at 62 grains.
Sounds like the BC is in the mid to high 3's
They are claiming some very high velocities. Either way, if the bullet shoots good, it will sure buck the wind on the longer varmint shots.
I don't remember anybody saying Hornady's new cartridges are not accurate. Even with cheap barrels.
Maybe this one will be different?
Twist rate and freebore..... 6ARC is a perfect example, I've seen post after post of guys trying to get the 6ARC to shoot light 55-58gr bullets with the standard fast twist and long throat and I'm yet to see one that shoots. 87gr and up it shoots great. The 224V falls into this exact same setup that's designed with a fast twist and long throat to shoot heavy for caliber bullets. I haven't seen a 224V yet that could shoot the 50-55s with any type of impressive results.
I HIGHLY doubt the 22ARC will come with a slow twist barrel and minimal freebore. If a person wants a complete factory gun and ammo that shoots fast in an AR the 22Nosler or 204 is the king, call me skeptical until I see real world reports from end users, not Hornady....
I"m curious if the barrel manufactures will standardize the free bore better than they have on the 6 ARC. In the 6, its not uncommon to have a short throat. Ive seen many people talk about running factory Hornady Black through a seating die because the factory load was into their lands. I know my Proof barrel shoots 87's great... but the bullet was about .005" into the lands at Hornadys suggested C.O.A.L.
Originally Posted By: Bob AzadiGotta love Hornady marketing! This new .22 is a solution in search of a problem. The same thing .224 Valkyrie promised, and trying to recreate the "magic" of .22-250. Based on what I have seen and read, it's a .223 + 300fps. That puts it too close to the .223 and does not even warrant a second look in my book. And I say this as a huge 6mm ARC fan.
The new ELD-VT bullets have me intrigued however. I will try some out and see how they compare to the VMAX and Varmageddons that I'm using now.
might only be a couple hundred fps faster, but that .395 g1 smokes the current 223 offerings in the same weight class.
that bullet at 3300 is supersonic out past 1k vs the 62gr fmj hornady black 223 that falls off somewhere a little past 700. heck the 62 vt is holding velocity at 1k what the 62gr fmj is at about 630 yds or so.
so that only couple hundred fps and the BC really spank the current 223 offerings when you start to look at them down range
so at least on paper it looks s*xy as [beeep]![]()
It's just the 6.5 Grendel necked down. With Lapua making Grendel brass, it's a no brainer to use anything but.This discussion is all fine and dandy but the biggest concern, at least for me, is brass availability. Does anyone know how to make this brass in the event Hornady does not provide brass for sale and forces people to shoot THEIR ammo? I would hate to invest in a whole new rifle only to find out I have to buy ammo at $1.51 per round. And really, Hornady brass isn't that good anyways.
Thank you for that info. Curious, how would one neck down from 6.5? I am not familiar with that process.It's just the 6.5 Grendel necked down. With Lapua making Grendel brass, it's a no brainer to use anything but.
Starline makes it as well, good for 2nd place.