The CT/Ballistic tip bullets are not built as heavily and tend to come apart. My experience this happens as low as 2600 FPS at impact. In a 30-06 I blew a deer's shoulder apart with one. Yes, the deer was down, but it ruined a whole quarter for eating, and it took a second round to kill it. If this happens with a measly 30-06.... I know guys who had these bullets fail (as in no recovered animal) when shooting Elk (.300 Weatherby with 180 BT). The reason I used the bullet was that it shot better than anything else in that rifle, and I figured deer, well anything will kill deer. I won't do that again. The 168 .308 CT is one of the rounds that I found Nosler's BC to be a bit suspect, as its closer to .400 than .500 in my rifles, but that's a study of 3 guns.
Nosler's Partition and to some extent, accubond don't do the same lack of weight retention that the ballistic tip has, and honestly, I have come to the conclusion that for me (and only me) the ballistic tips are a varmint bullet.
The TSX line has never failed me with penetration (cape buffalo and african plains game, although using a .375 for PG really makes the penetration argument a nonsequitur) and the only knock I have heard on it is that it doesn't seem to shock the game as well as a lead cored bullet will. I know some rifles that shoot them (TSX) well. My .375 H&H is a solid 1/2 MOA gun with the 300 grain TSX. My 30-06 Dakota is one that doesn't seem to like them as much (about 1.25 MOA) Whether the TSX is accurate is all in the individual rifle. Whether its worth using for a hunt is based on accuracy and terminal ballistics, which this thread is not really concerned about it seems (just the energy at distance and amount of drop) and BC is meaningless if you have a good rangefinder, a good wind velocity measurement and good dope on your load- dial it in and hit what you are shooting at. BC helps if you have some degree of error in your rangefinding or wind estimation skills only. The required kinetic energy is going to be there well past any reasonable shot.
Snowgun, as far as I am concerned, if your rifle likes the TSX or TTSX, I would not use anything else. The TSX is the only expanding bullet I now use with my african bolt rifles, but that's because they shoot well in those guns and penetrate. You can't complain about the results you have at all. The only reason I would try a different bullet is if you think your accuracy is lacking. 0.3 MOA? I would not bother with the CT Silvertip. My comment was meant that the Game King or the Ballistic Silver Tip will fragment if you have too high a impact velocity. The Barnes will not have that problem.
Sam, part of the reason I said what I did is that the 300gr SMK is not a hunting bullet, and your touting it in comparison to the Barnes TSX line is really apples to tomatoes. Comparing a dedicated long range target bullet to a antimaterial round for BC purposes is disingenuous also. If you are going to compare a specialized LR target set up, compare it to another specialized LR target set up. As I see it, all the hunting type bullets typically have BC's that are reasonably close as long as you compare "similar" bullets. I think your comparison of the 7mm RM hunting loads to specialized long range target rounds is not a reasonable argument. My .50 is not really set up for extreme range shooting. Semi autos just are not as good as a good bolt gun for that, having said that, I can get consistent hits out to 1000 with it on 55 gallon barrels. Is that true long range accuracy? No. But it does what I ask it to, and that is about at the limits of my ability to shoot a non benched gun. I don't do any better with the A Max, except it does require a few rounds to get the elevation changes settled in because I'm not sitting and writing down drops at 1000 (although I really should...) I don't compete at long range rifle, I don't have the patience for it. Having said that, I will match you guys round for round with my .50 vs your .338's and I suspect I will still be happily pulling the trigger long after you have given up from the recoil and concussion. You also need to brush up on what a smiley (

