TripleDeuce660
Active member
I might have a space finaly to start reloading.
I am wondering what sort of reduced loads can be used in a .223 1:8. They made it Illegal to shoot coyote with rimfire in ca this year. I got caught with my pants down when a huge dog crossed me inside 50 yards and I just had a rimfire with me. So I am thinking about some reduced power loads for headshooting cottontails and blowing up jacks. Maybe a 36 gr or 40 gr to keep a decent trajectory. When is the accuracy likely to suffer?
I know the .222 rem can go down to about 22mag levels not sure about .223.
The .223 with 55gr sp is perfect for jacks. When it expands it is explosive.
If it doesn't expand like this one it really isn't too much damage.
Cottontails are fine with a headshot which I can do to about 200 yards. If you hit the body it is no bueno. I'm thinking if the load is slow enough it won't expand so violently. We have to use expanding bullets in CA.
I am wondering what sort of reduced loads can be used in a .223 1:8. They made it Illegal to shoot coyote with rimfire in ca this year. I got caught with my pants down when a huge dog crossed me inside 50 yards and I just had a rimfire with me. So I am thinking about some reduced power loads for headshooting cottontails and blowing up jacks. Maybe a 36 gr or 40 gr to keep a decent trajectory. When is the accuracy likely to suffer?
I know the .222 rem can go down to about 22mag levels not sure about .223.
The .223 with 55gr sp is perfect for jacks. When it expands it is explosive.
If it doesn't expand like this one it really isn't too much damage.
Cottontails are fine with a headshot which I can do to about 200 yards. If you hit the body it is no bueno. I'm thinking if the load is slow enough it won't expand so violently. We have to use expanding bullets in CA.
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