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#5448798 07/23/11
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Has anybody used the Hornady SST for elk. I'm shooting a 7mm Rem Mag and right now I'm using Winchester Accubond 160 gr. The problem that I'm having is that I can't get any better than a 2" group at 200 yds out of my gun and they seem to float around the target. I'm using a T/C Prohunter with a Nikon Monarch BDC 3x12x42 and shooting from a bench and lead sled. I picked up a box of the Hornady 162 gr SST to give them a try to see if the will close up the group. Any info will help. Thanks in advance.

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A 2 inch group at 200 yards is 1 MOA.

That's not bad at all, in fact it's pretty good.
My experience has been that few "box stock" factory rifles do that good (1 MOA), most are more like 1.2 to 1.5 MOA.
It also takes a fairly skilled marksman to consistently hold 1 MOA with a sporter weight rifle with stock trigger.

I know you see lots of posts about people shooting half minuet groups, but half of them are BS, and the other half people who practice a lot, and have rifles that have been bedded, with trigger jobs and have spent a lot of time working up loads.




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162g SST at 3150 has taken two eland and two Kudu that I am aware of, instant death on all 4 animals.

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I've killed 3 whitetails, 1 muley, 1 antelope, 1 javelina, and 1 hog with 130gr 277 SSTs. They do kill if you shoot them in the right spot. However, they fragment into a million little pieces and often don't leave an exit wound. The muley I shot last year didn't leave a spot or blood or single hair after the shot. If you need a guaranteed big exit wound with a gushing blood trail, it's not the bullet for you.



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Originally Posted by Anaconda
A 2 inch group at 200 yards is 1 MOA.

That's not bad at all, in fact it's pretty good.
My experience has been that few "box stock" factory rifles do that good (1 MOA), most are more like 1.2 to 1.5 MOA.
It also takes a fairly skilled marksman to consistently hold 1 MOA with a sporter weight rifle with stock trigger.

I know you see lots of posts about people shooting half minuet groups, but half of them are BS, and the other half people who practice a lot, and have rifles that have been bedded, with trigger jobs and have spent a lot of time working up loads.




Amen to that! That's where the "If I do my part" comes in. That way, they can shoot 5 shots, 3 of them are in 3/4 MOA and the others complete a nice 2 MOA group. They then claim victory and success by quoting,"3/4 MOA when I do my part" that places all of the blame of the 'FLYERS' on themselves and not their rifle.

When I do my part: (definition) My rifle has never produced a 1/4 MOA, 1/2 MOA, 3/4 MOA group but it can, I just know it can.

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I have tried SSTs in .25, .27 and .28 caliber rifles and found all of them too soft for anything but smaller deer and pronghorns. As DP4 said, they tend to fragment if you hit big bones. That said, I have never tried the 162. It may be stouter than the 117 grain .25s, the 130 grain .27s and the 139 grain .28s that I have tried.


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I use them in a ,338 225Gr at 3150, I have killed 9 elk with them, They hit like a hammer, but make sure you shoot them thru the ribs. I've made a couple of Texas heart shots and lost a ton of meat.

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2" @ 200 is plenty good enough unless you plan on head shots way out there.


Coyote Hunter - NRA Patriot Life, NRA Whittington Center Life, GOA, DAD - and I VOTE!

No, I'm not a Ruger bigot - just an unabashed fan of their revolvers, M77's and #1's.

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Originally Posted by Anaconda
A 2 inch group at 200 yards is 1 MOA.

That's not bad at all, in fact it's pretty good.
My experience has been that few "box stock" factory rifles do that good (1 MOA), most are more like 1.2 to 1.5 MOA.
It also takes a fairly skilled marksman to consistently hold 1 MOA with a sporter weight rifle with stock trigger.

I know you see lots of posts about people shooting half minuet groups, but half of them are BS, and the other half people who practice a lot, and have rifles that have been bedded, with trigger jobs and have spent a lot of time working up loads.




Good post.


Originally Posted by raybass
I try to stick with the basics, they do so well. Nothing fancy mind you, just plain jane will get it done with style.
Originally Posted by Pharmseller
You want to see an animal drop right now? Shoot him in the ear hole.

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Originally Posted by LKC
Has anybody used the Hornady SST for elk. I'm shooting a 7mm Rem Mag and right now I'm using Winchester Accubond 160 gr. The problem that I'm having is that I can't get any better than a 2" group at 200 yds out of my gun and they seem to float around the target. I'm using a T/C Prohunter with a Nikon Monarch BDC 3x12x42 and shooting from a bench and lead sled. I picked up a box of the Hornady 162 gr SST to give them a try to see if the will close up the group. Any info will help. Thanks in advance.

2" at 200 yards is great shooting. Keep shooting the Accubonds that you know will work well for elk rather then switch to a bullet that may or may not be too soft (my experience with them in a 300wby says they are to soft). Also, drop the lead sled and start practicing from field positions unless you plan on dragging that contraption into the woods with you.


Whatever a 7x57 can do a 270 can do better.

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If you'e fixin' to put a hole in something, make it a hole to remember.

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Not sure what 71.25 grains of H-1000 under 140 grain SST's in my 7MM Rem-mag leaves the barrel at? (is there a way to find out, with out a chrno?)

But for a rather less expensive bullet, they sure leave some nice close holes in paper! I am very pleased in finding the sweet-spot with these early in working up a load!

I have yet to put holes in elk with them, but do not expect any problems.
The thought of a bullets coming apart inside a rib-cage of an elk has an appeal to me. That is transferring energy!

Having found Nolser BTs in the rib-cage (no exit hole), the fact still remains. The elk was on its side.

Just thinking a bad hit is a bad hit. I for one am willing to hunt the SSTs and compare the taste.

For deer and antelope, they seem more then ideal. Bringing up the idea that they might not be that healthy for coyote either?


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Originally Posted by K_Salonek
Not sure what 71.25 grains of H-1000 under 140 grain SST's in my 7MM Rem-mag leaves the barrel at? (is there a way to find out, with out a chrno?)


Absolutely. Or at least close enough.
1. Shoot the bullet at several different ranges and note the POI vs POA. Ranges of 100, 200 and 400 will be enough and you can get reasonably close without going to 400.
2. Use a ballistic calculator (I mostly use �Point Blank�, available free at www.huntingnut.com) and enter the proper variables (altitude, temp, BC, zero range, estimated fps, etc.
3. Modify BC, fps and zero range until you get a close match to the trajectory you noted in step 1.
4. The fps will be pretty close if done correctly.

This is the method I used for my 7mm RM before I got a chrono. When I finally did get a chrono, the chrono reading was less than 50fps different than what I calculated.

Quote

But for a rather less expensive bullet, they sure leave some nice close holes in paper! I am very pleased in finding the sweet-spot with these early in working up a load!

I have yet to put holes in elk with them, but do not expect any problems.
The thought of a bullets coming apart inside a rib-cage of an elk has an appeal to me. That is transferring energy!

Having found Nolser BTs in the rib-cage (no exit hole), the fact still remains. The elk was on its side.

Just thinking a bad hit is a bad hit. I for one am willing to hunt the SSTs and compare the taste.

For deer and antelope, they seem more then ideal. Bringing up the idea that they might not be that healthy for coyote either?


The thought of bullets coming apart inside the ribcage of an elk has little appeal to me. Yes, it can be very effective and will generally result in a dead animal � often with dramatic straight-down, DRT results. But what happens when you get a difficult quartering or THS opportunity at a fleeing elk that is or may be wounded? Will a bullet that comes apart quickly make it to the vitals?

There are a lot of bullets I would choose before I�d use a fast 140g SST for elk.
North Fork
MRX / TTSX
GMX
Trophy Bonded
A-Frame
AccuBond
Scirocco II
InterBond
Partition





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Originally Posted by Coyote_Hunter


The thought of bullets coming apart inside the ribcage of an elk has little appeal to me. Yes, it can be very effective and will generally result in a dead animal � often with dramatic straight-down, DRT results. But what happens when you get a difficult quartering or THS opportunity at a fleeing elk that is or may be wounded? Will a bullet that comes apart quickly make it to the vitals?

There are a lot of bullets I would choose before I�d use a fast 140g SST for elk...



That's how I see it, too.

My experience was that the SST's shot the best out of my rifle, but they were the only bullets I tried where I could pick pieces out of the backstop at the range. That didn't make me feel too comfortable, so I chose Interbonds instead. The sample of 1 found one pass-through on the rib cage with maybe 50% expansion (judging from the exit hole), & 1 slug recovered from the offside of the skull, similarly expanded. Since I'm launching them at lowly .30-06 speeds, I've since gone to Interlocks.

It would be great if we all had the experience of having 100's of kills with every bullet in every weight offered. Barring that, though, we have to make our own decisions about what we personally feel comfortable with, & go on from there.

I wouldn't feel comfortable with the SST's at 7 Mag speeds. Maybe 7x57 light-load speeds, or 7x30 Waters for sure.

FC


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My two daugthers (13 and 16) have been shooting the 139gr SST out of their .280 Remington with good success.

They have shot six elk between them, at least 6 deer and three antelope and the bullets worked fine.

A couple bang flops on the elk and they are extremely accurate.

From what I've seen first-hand, no worries IMO.

Last edited by FishN4Eyes; 07/27/11.
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140 gr. SST's in my 6.5-284 at 2,950 fps are about perfect regarding performance. In my .240 Wby, I'm going to try some 95 gr. SST's but at speeds >3,400 fps, a tougher bullet may be called for. Just got in some 90 gr. E-Tips, 100 gr. Part. and 100 gr. Speer Grand Slam's to try.

So, with SST's, I would think it's all about how fast you're driving them. I think they're pretty tough cup and core bullets compared to some. From what I've seen, tougher than NBT's, for example.

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Thanks CH,

I will chart a few at known distances. It would be good to know the real external ballistics.
So far, it seems they are dead on the range-lines of my 7mm-RM's Z-600 .

There is no doubt that there are better bullets for elk then the SSTs , I am from the Nolser school myself. Thinking that I have at least 3 boxes of better choices sitting behind a box of SSTs. The SSTs just plain do well in my rifle.

My elk rifle is in the truck right now, it and the dog go everywhere I go. Several ranches I visit will allow an occasional shot at their distant coyote, whistle-pigs (mountain version of prairie-dog), ravens and crows. Those SSTs seem to outshine about any choice available. Having about 220 loaded up (in range brass, the cheap bullets will be perfect to fire form better potentials), in the truck right now. What a year it would be if I have about 20 left come elk season!

And better year yet, if there are still 19 left standing over an elk?

I made the SSTs my go-2 bullet, till I know more about them. Believing in getting real comfortable where they are going to hit at range, the SSTs hooked me with the price (Midway had them on sale, about 2 SSTs for the price of a single Nolser), and sold me with holes in paper.

How wonderful it is to share ideas, as mentioned, I have not shot anything with the SSTs I wanted to eat, yet.
From this discussion, it will be etched in my mind a little deeper to hold for that shot into the bread-basket.


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I have used SST's in a couple of Handi-Rifles:

95 grainers in a .243 to kill a doe antelope at about 200 yards; broke the off-side shouler and exited. I was kind of impressed...not much meat damage really;
[Linked Image]

then a 117 grainer in a 25 Remington to kill a doe mule deer at about 70 yards. No major bones were struck,the bullet exited. Again, I was satisfied with its performance.

[Linked Image]

Velocities were moderate, neither load would be considered maximum. However, elk are big, tough animals. One would have to really be careful of the shot agle, trying to place a bullet in the vitals without hitting any large bones with SST's, I think.

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Please do not use the SST for elk. I had two come apart on WTs (a 139gr 7mm from a 7mm-08 and a 150gr from a 308) at very moderate MV of 2550fps. I did not hit big bones either, just ribs. No exit holes, and very sparse blood trails. Yes, I found the deer but they were tough recoveries. I know it is only a sample of two but they were the first two I used. While I would not say the bullets failed, they did not even come close to the performance I want in a hunting bullet.

IMO, they are only good for coyotes and pests.

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Very cool topic!

While some think that the SST might fragment at magnum velocities at closer ranges. Some might believe it would be a better choice for slower ammo (think 7MM-08)?

Just another view, inside a 100 ~ 150 yards, odds are in the hunters favor. Most anything is going to do a good job, if the Hunter does his. Add distance, and a 300Mag/7MM-RM turns into a 30-06/.280 , go out a little further, and it spins itself down to a .308/7MM-08 .

At range, that aggressive bullet may have an edge over a slower expanding bullet? As I understand it, transferring energy is one thing, watching an elk bleed out from a rifle shot is not unheard of. The SST sounds like it would sure do a number rearranging things a big ol bull thinks he needs.


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The SST appears to me to be a good middle of the road bullet, on the tough end of cup and core, and with a reputation for accuracy. In my Model 70/Krieger 6.5-284, (2,950 fps) the 140 SST was slightly more accurate than the best I could get out of the 140 VLD after all the "jump adjustments", "sweet spot" loads, etc. In fact the 140 SST was the best bullet for accuracy and performance in that gun.

I don't think I'd trust it with the hyper-vel guns, thinking more of the TSX, TTSX, Grand Slam, Scirocco II, E-Tip, Interbond class of bullets. Those seem to perform better in the smokin' calibers. At slower velocities some of those bullets may prove disappointing.

You gotta match the game, the caliber, the velocity, the range for a "perfect" combo. And opinions will vary there, too, as true perfection is probably a figment of our imagination. We just need to get as close as we can and that's what makes it fun and a challenge.

DF

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