westberg wrote:Come on guy's look at the cartridge the cool factor alone is worth buying.
westberg wrote:Come on guy's look at the cartridge the cool factor alone is worth buying.
plblark wrote:EJ, better get to the range witrh him before he sells it for something else .. yeah, I KNOW he hasn't bought it yet ...
Hornady trajectory figures show that when zeroed at 100 yards, this bullet hits only 0.1" high at 50 yards, and 2.6" low at 150 yards.
With its intrinsic MOA accuracy, the .17 HMR cartridge is accurate enough to score clean kills on small game at 150 yards. The small game hunter with a .17 HMR rifle is pretty much out of excuses for his misses, at least on a calm day.
Even more promising were the 2003-2004 announcements by CCI, Federal and Remington that they were commencing distribution of .17 HMR ammunition under their brand names. CCI will continue to manufacture the .17 HMR ammo for all four brands, but the load specifications vary.
cobb wrote:westberg wrote:Come on guy's look at the cartridge the cool factor alone is worth buying.
Which, the .17 HMR or the .17 Mach2?
I had a Marlin in .17 HMR and sold it without ever firing it.
EJSG19 wrote:Yes but...
How much wind can a 17 grain bullet buck?Lets see that 150 yard shot with a stiff cross wind.
But beware of the wind! A 10 MPH cross wind will blow the 17 grain V-Max bullet 8" laterally at 150 yards, or the 20 grain XTP bullet 8.8" off course at the same range.
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