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In another thread, Mule Deer mentioned that at .250 Savage velocities, he finds the Hornady Interlock a little hard....especially for lung shots. The new barrel on my .260 loves 129 grain Hornady Interlocks pushed to 2740 fps by H4350. Sub-one inch three shot groups @ 100 yards are common. At this velocity will this bullet perform well on a behind the shoulder lung shot on deer? Or should I aim for the shoulder and sacrifice a little venison? First hunt with the new barrel and load is scheduled for this week smile.

Last edited by 300_savage; 11/23/14.
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If you think the standard 129 gr Interlock is too hard, there is ways the 129 SST. I have used the 129 Interlock and been satisfied.

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300 Savage,

I would guess the 100-grain .25 might be harder than most Interlock Spire Points, because it's loaded in .257 Weatherby factory ammo. Plus, many .250's have 1-14 twists, which don't encourage expansion at moderate velocities.

But at typical .260 (or 6.5x55 or 6.5 Creedmoor) velocities, with the typical 1-8 or 1-9 6.5mm rifling twist, the 129 performs fine.


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I used the 129g Hornady in a 6.5x55 at 2,770 on a decent mule deer buck last year. Worked great, no issues.

Behind the shoulder lung shot will be fine. I can't attest to the bullets ability to punch through a shoulder, but it may work there too.


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Thanks Mule Deer and everybody. I appreciate being able to access the experience of others that this site offers!
Also, I just noted the typo in my original post (.250 instead of .260) and fixed it.

Last edited by 300_savage; 11/23/14.
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Yeah, I've had great success with any time I have used the old 129 Grain Hornady SP....I fear it disappearing, with all the new plastic tipped bullets all the time...

like the excellent 154 grain RN in 7mm...

I've taken deer with it from 50 yds to 250+ yds... and each time was a bang flop performance...

I've kinda always thought the most balanced pair of deer cartridges were the 7/08 with the 139 grain SP or the 260 with the 129 grain SP...

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The 129 grain interlock was temporarily suspended from production, per Hornady's website about a month ago. I looked a minute ago and it looks like it is back in production..at least the disclaimer is gone. Sure hope so! But, I guess as long as we have good bullets to replace them, we shouldn't mourn the ones that disappear. Times change, whether we want them to or not.

Last edited by 300_savage; 11/23/14.
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I've got to admit that I haven't used the 129 much, but decided to try it after shooting it in side by side tests into discarded textbooks, along with the 120 TSX at 200 yards. Ironically there was not a noticeable difference in penetration. The most recent caribou I've killed with the rifle (6.5x55) was one I hit a bit higher than I expected - it hit the spine. The spine was severed, the bullet exited, and there was no sign of bullet pieces in the bullet track. (The shot was approaching an estimated 200 yards.) Like the 139 SP in the 7mm-08, the 129 in the medium case looks like an awfully good general purpose bullet.


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I've used the 129SP in my 6.5x55 and the 264 Win Mag finding it one of the best cup n core choices out there. Deer and antelope. Magnum Man

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I shoot the 129 gr and 140 gr Spire Points in my 6.5-'06, and they both work for me...

jim


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I've tried the Nosler 120 BT, 125 PT, 140 PT and Hornady Interlock 129 in my Ruger .260 Rem. The 129 Hornady is the most precise in my rifle. I had questions about their effectiveness vs. Nosler as I'm a pretty big Nosler fan. I've been using them on mule deer and whitetails for the last four years out of my 22" barreled Ruger and 17" MGM Encore barrel as a pistol in Minnesota. Both guns like the exact same load: Lapua .260 brass, Rem 9 1/2 primer, 44 gr. IMR 4350. This yields 2825 fps from the 22" barrel and 2600 from the 17" barrel. My farthest shot on a deer is 310 yds with the rifle, quartering away, through both lungs and the opposite shoulder. Recovered the bullet under the skin at the base of the neck, 70% retention, perfect expansion. Closest shot was about 100 yds, running, quartering away. I put the bullet through the armpit, destroyed the heart, no recovery. I've taken 3 deer with the 17" barreled pistol, all at around 125 yds, two broadside through the lungs behind the shoulder, one severely quartering toward, almost head on. No recovery on any of the bullets, lungs had a nice big hole through them on the two broadside shots, classic headlong death run by the deer, nice blood trail. Head-on/quartering toward was a bit high, hit the front of the ribcage and exited the shoulder. Destroyed the front of one lung and tore out the jugular. No massive meat damage on any deer I've shot with the 129 Hornady, which is more than I can say about the 120 gr. Nosler BT. When I heard Hornady was suspending production I put 500 129 gr. Hornady's on my bench. From the handgun the 120 gr. BT shoots just as good with a bit more velocity and a bit flatter. Once I've shot up the Hornadys I have loaded for the TC, I'll try out the Nosler 120 BT on Minnesota deer next fall and see how they perform at a lower velocity.

Long story short, if your gun shoots the 129 gr. well at .260 velocities, I would have no qualms about killing elk with them.


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Selmer, that's a lot of real world experience. My gun likes them, and I've got a lot of them. And you all have set my mind at ease.....chuckle...after Mule Deer had me worrying smile.

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My little .260 Rem mountain rifle really likes the 129 Hornady with H4831. It is like lightning has touched down on our deer when it hits them.


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Wife and I have used the 129 out of a 260 on two deer. Mine was a 30 yard double lung shot on a big doe. She ran 125-130 yards. I was not impressed. The wife double lunged a medium buck at about 135 yards and she said he dropped right there. No witnesses. Go figure!

I haven't had good luck with Hornadys. Out of a 358 at 60 yards, 200 RN double lung shot, nice buck ran 125 yards. Buck at 60 yards, lung shot, 308 150 Spire Point, ran 95 yards. With Sierras, most of the deer I've shot go 40-50 yards whether 260, 7mm08 or 308. I did have similar results on a couple deer with the 139 Hornady out of a 7x57.

Last edited by AnsonRogers; 11/24/14.
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My Sako Finnbear in 6.5X55 loved them, my Steyr in 6.5X57 not as much as the 130g Accubond. Going to try the 129g Interlock in a new CZ550FS in 6.5X55.

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Before last season I built a little handy 6.5CM (same velocity as a 260 or close enough not to matter) and I have been shooting Hornady 129's. I shot 3 deer with it last year and 2 this year (so far). Ranges as short as maybe 25 yds and the long shot was 330yds. All but one of the bullets exited, the one that didn't exit went through both shoulders and the jacket was under the skin and the core exited, DRT of course. All seemed to do good but not excessive damage.

Over all I am pretty happy with 129's, they are very accurate and seem like good deer medicine and best of all best of all they are the cheapest bullet I played with.


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I have killed a bunch of TN whitetail(30-40 I reckon) with the 129 Hornady IL over RL 19. It is accurate, effective, and inexpensive- I did lose one after what I thought was a good hit and tons of blood-always figured aliens got it! Rifle is a .260 Ruger boat paddle.

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I left out that I've shot a few deer with the 130 g. AB - okay performance, but nothing exceeding the Hornady terminal results at .260 Rem velocities - might be different if you get over 3000 fps


Selmer

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Good information Selmer. Tagging this thread.


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