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Posted By: jwp475 Pictures Of Recovered Accubonds - 05/25/23
Please post pictures of your recovered Accubonds here.
Here's a few from Africa, 160gr 7mm's

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Never found one in a whitetail, always a pass through
I wasn't even aware that they had a drinking problem.
Have a collection of around a dozen, about half from animals I killed and half from hunting companions I was standing alongside. Am not about to go through the collection and take a photo, but will post this one--the single 9.3 250-grain I've recovered after killing a bunch of big game with it from my CZ 9.3x62 from Africa to Alaska, the animals weighing up to around 700 pounds.

This was from a 7-1/2 foot interior Alaska grizzly, angling away at around 50 yards. The bullet entering the right rear ribs, and ending up under the skin on the left side of the neck. It retained 81% of its weight, which isn't exactly surprising since Nosler designed AccuBonds to perform like Partitions, and since around 1990 had been making Partitions from .33 caliber on up so they'd retain more weight.

The smaller-caliber AccuBonds recovered average around 65-70% weight retention, like Partitions. The last I recovered was 150-grain .30 from a .308 Winchester, muzzle velocity around 2850 fps. It killed a whitetail doe at around 75 yards, which was almost directly facing me. It entered just inside the left shoulder and ended up in the left ham, retaining 70.5% of its weight.

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Originally Posted by JGRaider
Here's a few from Africa, 160gr 7mm's

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Was expecting some solid animals on this one.

Very good.




GR
I've got some of those Acubomb things. grin
I used my first, a 165gr .308, on a head-on shot last Fall at 50 yards. Didn’t pass through, but thankfully was captured in the stomach and nothing was spilled. DRT.

I use that bullet and the BT of the same weight, all blems, interchangeably at the same moderate load level in my .308s. 41-42gr of RL15 shoots very nicely and kills very dead. Think I have enough for my duration, as long as I don’t squander them on paper.

I also have a small pile of the 129gr ABLR 6.5s and some 130gr .270s. Load work on those is still pending. StaBall 6.5 should get those .270s humming right along. I’m so pleased with 6.5 Gold Dots that it’s going to be a while before I get to those I think.
Pappy,

Have taken some game with the ABLRs, especially the 129-grain 6.5s. While they hold together, they're designed to expand easily at longer ranges. Those recovered at "conventional" ranges average about 50% weight retention, give or take 10%, which is about what I've found with Ballistic Tips and Hornady Spire Point Interlocks.

John
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Here are a few.

The 1st was driven at 2744 fps MV and recovered from a hog I killed at around 140 yards.

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The next -- a 6.5mm 130 grain AB -- was taken from a quartering shot on an old boar. MV from the 6.5x30-30 AI was around 2550, if memory serves. Range was about 170 yards.

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The next set was driven around 2450 fps MV from a Contender carbine, but it's been so many years ago that I don't recall the details other than they were likely taken from hogs. (I never recovered one from a deer that I recall.) At some point, I must have tumbled them clean because there was a bit of corncob media in the mini-ziplock these were in.

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I have more, but those were primarily stored on photobucket, which is a bit of a sore subject with me LOL. A few others were on the now-defunct Specialty Pistols forum. Everything was deleted when the owner shut down the site, and there seems to be no archived copies, either.
Originally Posted by Mule Deer
Pappy,

Have taken some game with the ABLRs, especially the 129-grain 6.5s. While they hold together, they're designed to expand easily at longer ranges. Those recovered at "conventional" ranges average about 50% weight retention, give or take 10%, which is about what I've found with Ballistic Tips and Hornady Spire Point Interlocks.

John

I’ve heard that before, probably from you come to think of it.🤔

The 6.5s are for my Grendel, which should provide about the right velocity for good performance at the ranges I deal with, and even out there a bit if it comes to that. The .270s are the standard ones, picked up cheaply from SPS and may never see the field since my .270 is pretty hefty, and I’m pretty old, but perhaps my offspring can make good use of them. I find myself with a schitt ton of bullets since I have a hard time passing up stuff I don’t need at a price I can’t resist, as the saying goes, and for a while SPS was almost giving stuff away at times.
If your experience on deer using the 129 gr. ABLR out of a 6.5 Grendel matches mine you’ll be very pleased with it. I took three deer using the 129 gr. ABLR out of my 6.5 Grendel this past season and was well pleased with the results. Quick kills with pass throughs, no tracking required.
Originally Posted by gldprimr
If your experience on deer using the 129 gr. ABLR out of a 6.5 Grendel matches mine you’ll be very pleased with it. I took three deer using the 129 gr. ABLR out of my 6.5 Grendel this past season and was well pleased with the results. Quick kills with pass throughs, no tracking required.
Music to my ears, friend.
My "new to me" CZ 527 Grendel shoots the 129 ABLR very well and I have been playing around with the most temp-resistant powders to try to get a good hunting load that shoots as well as CFE-223 does (but it is really temp-sensitive). It is looking like AR-Comp is going to be the best of the stable powders, and give me an easy 2500+ FPS. This holds over 2000 FPS to 400 yards and seems like, on paper, it'd be the perfect hunting bullet. I've not hunted this sweet carbine yet but will be taking it to MT this fall for deer, and hopefully, Pronghorn.
Thanks for sharing your experience with it,
Rex

EDIT: Realized my post above is not germane to the OP. I have only killed a few head of game with the basic Accubond, and have yet to recover a bullet. Mule deer and Pronghorn with the 6.5mm 130 grain, and elk with the 9.3mm 250 grain. All critters died, so no complaints. Interesting observation on the autopsies is that the entrance holes looked more like exits and the exits looked more like entries. Kind of strange, but dead is dead. I did recover a 90 grain .243 AB from a MT whitetail buck my buddy killed with my .243 Win handloads. Under the off-side skin, and textbook 65% weight retention. That year, he and his brother killed 4 deer with 4 consecutive shots from the same rifle with that load, 2 whitetails in MT and 2 mulies in AZ. Only the one bullet recovered.
110 Gr Accubond recovered from an Iranian Red Sheep shot at 125 yards. Bullet entered the front right shoulder, breaking both shoulders, and recovered underneath the skin on the off side. Starting velocity was 3450-ish from a 257 Wby.

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Originally Posted by TRexF16
....
My "new to me" CZ 527 Grendel shoots the 129 ABLR very well and I have been playing around with the most temp-resistant powders to try to get a good hunting load that shoots as well as CFE-223 does (but it is really temp-sensitive). It is looking like AR-Comp is going to be the best of the stable powders, and give me an easy 2500+ FPS. This holds over 2000 FPS to 400 yards and seems like, on paper, it'd be the perfect hunting bullet. I've not hunted this sweet carbine yet but will be taking it to MT this fall for deer, and hopefully, Pronghorn.
...

I'll follow the jumped topic for a minute with the 129 ABLR. I've been using it for several years out of the 6.5 CM. In most cases, I've had pass throughs, even on shoulder shots. I've not dug out any of the non-exits out as they were using an angle where they ended up in guts. Exits have been notable but not messy. Most of these have been sub 100 yards though a few have been over 400. I'm several grains under a max load so that may help with it's performance. It's been a great bullet for my use. At some point I'm going to try it in the Grendel.

I've used the 150 gr AB in the .308 as a replacement for the ballistic tip. I've not caught any of them, all have been passthroughs, and all have been behind the shoulder shots. My experience with it has been good, but my experience with it has also been limited. When I couldn't find 150 ballistic tips, I simply used the same load and seating depth with the AB and the results on paper were exactly the same.
I shot a 5pt bull elk in 2010 with a 180gr AB out of a 300 Win Mag @ about 3100 fps muzzle velocity. He was moving 100yds away, the bullet broke the near side shoulder and continued thru the far shoulder with less bone contact and was found just under the hide. Retained weight was 82.7 gr and all that was left is basically a blown jacket. The damage was quite extensive, he dropped out of my line of sight but was pretty much dead right there. I hoped for a little better weight retention but it was a fairly severe test for a bullet.

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200ab, 300rum, mid 3100s mv, 348 yards.

Pulled out if a 8.5ft mtn grizz
165 AB 30-06 2900 start speed, bull elk pinned through front legs. Bullet found in the meat on the far side. 200 yards’ish



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200 AB 300 Wby 3050’ish start speed, bull elk, rear of ribs and found in opposite front leg.

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200 AB 300 RUM 3250 start speed. Bull elk, 560 yards. Ribs in, found after shattering opposite side leg bone.

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200 AB 300 Win 2975 start speed 675 yards. Ribs in and found behind front leg on the hide.

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These are 180grn .338's from my .338-06. The one on the left from milk jugs and the one on the right from an average whitetail. Both weigh exactly the same, 153grns. The one from the milk jugs went through the fewest of any bullet I've tested. The one from the buck surprised me that it didn't go through.

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Cool grab, amazing how similar they look.
260 grain Accubond, fired from my 375 H&H into a black bear at about 15 feet. Bullet was hanging in the off-side hide. Recovered weight is 218 grains and measures .73" wide.

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Bear had been wounded by another hunter, I went into the brush after it. smile

Guy
I think I'll stick with A-Frames
I'll get a better photo at some point, but here is one from June that was taken from a quartering hog taken at 140 yards. It is a 125 grain Accubond fired from a 300 Savage with a muzzle speed of 2740 fps.

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Originally Posted by colorado
I think I'll stick with A-Frames

I haven't hunted with them yet. Had some 350 gr A-Frames for my 45-70, they were quite accurate and when shot into water jugs, they mushroomed beautifully.

What sizes of A-Frames do you use?

Thanks, Guy
Originally Posted by colorado
I think I'll stick with A-Frames

Honest question: In what way are they better?
Originally Posted by southtexas
Originally Posted by colorado
I think I'll stick with A-Frames

Honest question: In what way are they better?

They have a built in mechanical fail safe mechanism. That can matter.
I could & would post mine but they don’t look a bit different from all these pictures. I have recovered about eight from: Axis, Red Stag, Oryx, Whitetail, Pig. My only surprise was the uniformity of their expansion. Mine were 7mm 140’s & 308 150’s & 165’s.
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by southtexas
Originally Posted by colorado
I think I'll stick with A-Frames

Honest question: In what way are they better?

They have a built in mechanical fail safe mechanism. That can matter.

Oh, really?

Have witnessed A-Frames where the "mechanical fail safe mechanism" didn't work, apparently because they were "over annealed" during the bonding process. Could provide details if you want.

Same thing happened briefly during one brief period of early AccuBond production. The difference is that Nosler reconized the problem early on, and corrected it. The head guy at Swift at the time denied it could happen--despite being sent the failed bullets.
Mule Deer, I’ve seen lots of pictures of A-Frames and read about them a bunch but never shot them myself. What was their failure mode? What did they hit to cause the failure?
There's a few different ones here. 140gn (280 Rem) 140gn (270wsm) 150gn (.308win)


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Originally Posted by Mule Deer
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by southtexas
Originally Posted by colorado
I think I'll stick with A-Frames

Honest question: In what way are they better?

They have a built in mechanical fail safe mechanism. That can matter.

Oh, really?

Have witnessed A-Frames where the "mechanical fail safe mechanism" didn't work, apparently because they were "over annealed" during the bonding process. Could provide details if you want.

Same thing happened briefly during one brief period of early AccuBond production. The difference is that Nosler reconized the problem early on, and corrected it. The head guy at Swift at the time denied it could happen--despite being sent the failed bullets.

John, by design these two bullets are different. Failure or not. ANY bullet can fail. But I’m not talking about a one time QC issue. Bonded core bullets without a partition or solid copper base can pancake. I have seen it happen more than once. This is because of design. Not in spite of it. When that happens penetration is severely compromised.

I’m not saying don’t use accubonds. But what I am doing is answering the question of why someone might prefer an A-Frame. Count me in as being in that camp.

Let me also say that the three biggest internal messes I’ve dealt with on big game were the result of Nosler Accubonds. Bar none. One of the times I was with a good friend who is a veterinarian. So a bloody expert in necropsy. We could not believe the shot placement and absolute destruction. It was ridiculous. This coming from a guy who has a dump truck full of experience with the Nosler BT on game.
Originally Posted by Mule Deer
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by southtexas
Originally Posted by colorado
I think I'll stick with A-Frames

Honest question: In what way are they better?

They have a built in mechanical fail safe mechanism. That can matter.

Oh, really?

Have witnessed A-Frames where the "mechanical fail safe mechanism" didn't work, apparently because they were "over annealed" during the bonding process. Could provide details if you want.

Same thing happened briefly during one brief period of early AccuBond production. The difference is that Nosler reconized the problem early on, and corrected it. The head guy at Swift at the time denied it could happen--despite being sent the failed bullets.

And one more thing. I spoke to Allen Day about his experience, face to face, with Bob Nosler over this “brief” Accubond problem. It sounded like a really pleasant encounter.
Recovered from smaller bull moose at 100yds from 375/338CT.

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I recovered an 8mm 200 launched by my .325 into the rear shoulder of a buck at about 40 yards. Oops. It went through the hip joint, then went the length of the deer and ended up under his chin under the hide. Retained almost exactly 70% and looked just like the pics here. I’ve got a pic somewhere I think.

I like NAB’s and use them with zero qualms.
[[/quote] John, by design these two bullets are different. Failure or not. ANY bullet can fail. But I’m not talking about a one time QC issue. Bonded core bullets without a partition or solid copper base can pancake. I have seen it happen more than once. This is because of design. Not in spite of it. When that happens penetration is severely compromised.

I’m not saying don’t use accubonds. But what I am doing is answering the question of why someone might prefer an A-Frame. Count me in as being in that camp.

Let me also say that the three biggest internal messes I’ve dealt with on big game were the result of Nosler Accubonds. Bar none. One of the times I was with a good friend who is a veterinarian. So a bloody expert in necropsy. We could not believe the shot placement and absolute destruction. It was ridiculous. This coming from a guy who has a dump truck full of experience with the Nosler BT on game.[/quote]

Pathfinder,

The failed A-Frames were 300-grain 9.3s, shot into a bull water buffalo with a wildcat about like the .375 H&H at around 50 yards. The bull was quartering toward the hunter (who was standing next to me, a friend and the ranch owner), and the bull landed in the big shoulder joint. The bull limped a few steps, then stood there looking at us again. There followed several more shots, both from the 9.3 and solids from the rancher's .458 Lott, before the bull finally expired. We didn't find any of the other 9.3s, but the first one was resting against the ribs just behind the shoulder, weighing half its original weight and about the size and shape of a thick nickel coin.

One of the interesting things about A-Frames that even some hunters don't realize is that only the front core is bonded. The rear core is not, and the best guess we could make was that somehow the front core didn't get bonded, and when it came apart the rear core broke through the partition--which isn't solid, since it has tiny hole in the middle that's filled with a little wedge of copper. Apparently the others also failed, since none of them entered the body cavity.

That does NOT mean A-Frames don't work well. They do, and I've not only used them but have seen the results from hunting partners I was standing next to on game up to Cape buffalo in size. They're very good bullets--but like the batch of AccuBonds that didn't getting annealed properly a year or two after the AB was introduced, a bonded bullet that doesn't bond is "annealed" and turned softer by the heating process.

In Nosler's case, it was traced to one worker who was hurrying his particular job, because demand was very high and he decided to speed things up. They caught it pretty quickly because they run accuracy and penetration with samples from every production run of every bullet, but some did get out.

Now, I don't know if the Accubonds that Allen Day took to Africa (which as I recall were 225-grain .338s) were from that batch. But I do know the sample bullets be brought to Nosler's plant when he met with Bob worked exactly like they should have in the penetration test run on them that day. Maybe one of Allen's boxes of AB's was from the bad batch--but the ones he brought to the Nosler Plant were not.

Bob didn't have the same impression that Allen did of the visit, partly because toward the end Allen started telling Bob he was running other aspects of the business all wrong, and Allen could straighten them out.

I must also confess that I've had some doubts about things Allen posted here on the Campfire. One time he posted about hunting elk and the .30-06 versus the .300 Winchester Magnum. At that point he claimed to have "killed almost 10 elk," and the ones shot with the .30-06 all went at least 100 yards before falling, while the .300-shot elk went less than 50 yards. I have some experience with elk hunting, and killed them with cartridges including the .270 Winchester, 7x57 Mauser, .300 Winchester Magnum, .300 Weatherby Magnum--but have taken more with the .30-06 than any other round. The farthest one has gone after being shot with a .30-06 was 45 yards--and my biggest bull in both body and antlers was taken with Federal factory ammo featuring the 180-grain Trophy Bonded Tip at 250 yards. It went 20 yards before falling. In fact, the only bull I've killed that went 100 yards was an archery kill: The arrow went through both lungs, and the fletching hung up on the ribs and hide on the far side. (Oh, and in addition I've been with Eileen when she's yaken all her elk, using the .270 Winchester and .257 Roberts--and none went anywhere near 100 yards either.)

"Bonded core bullets without a partition or solid copper base can pancake." I have seen that, but AccuBonds have the same solid base as Ballistic Tips--and in the heavier, larger caliber models the base is even thicker. This involves a little history: After Nosler switched to impact-extruding jackets and bullets in the late 1980s, rather than lathe-turning the jackets, they eventually decided to redesign the interior of the heavier Partitions by moving the Partition forward, so they'd retain a higher percentage of their weight.

But they didn't make any announcement of this, at least that I can recall, so I didn't find out about the change until I took a bull bison on a ranch in Wyoming during the winter of 1998. I used a .375 H&H with 300-grain Partition handloads, and the bull was quartering away on the first shot, which entered the middle of the ribs and ended up under the hide of the far shoulder. The bull walked slowly off for a few steps, then stood there broadside, so I shot again and he went down in maybe 3-4 seconds.

Both bullets were recovered from under the hide, and retained 88% and 89% of their weight. Back home I contacted Nosler and found out about the redesign.

Have since taken quite a few animals with two other heavier, larger caliber Partitions designed the same way, the 286-grain 9.3mm and the 400-grain .416--and recovered a few of those as well. The average retained weight of all of them--9.3s, 375s and .416s is 90.6%. Yet some hunters remain unaware of this, believing that all Partitions retain around 65-70% of their weight.

When Nosler decided to make AccuBonds they also decided to make the larger ones retain more weight, so made the thick bases of the jackets even thicker. The biggest one I've used is the 250-grain 9.3mm, on a bunch of big game from Alaska to Africa, started at a muzzle velocity of 2650 fps from both the 9.3x62 and the wildcat 9.3 Barsness-Sisk that Charlie and I designed. The ONLY one I've recovered was from an angling-away shot on a 7-1/2 foot interior grizzly in Alaska: The bullet entered the middle of the ribs on the right side, and ended up under the skin at the rear of the neck on the far side, retaining 81% of its weight.
Thanks for taking the time to write such a detailed post for us, John! Most interesting.

Rex
Rex,

Thanks!

One of the interesting things about gun writing is discovering stuff along the way--often due to being able to talk to manufacturers about why they do various things. Have found hunting-bullet manufacturers often tweak their products, in part thanks to field reports from customers--but sometimes due to other reasons.

A lot of hunters perceive some sort of magic in the word "bonded." In the early 2000s I was hunting in the area around Glenrock, Wyoming a lot, sometimes twice a year, for everything from prairie dogs to mule deer.

At the time Glenrock had a population of 2000+ people, but had a surprising number of shooting-related companies for such a small place, including A-Square, Talley, and North Fork Bullets--as well a component store that had one of the widest selections back then.

Got to talk extensively with Mike Brady, the developer of North Forks, in his shop. One of the things he mentioned is that after considerable experimentation with the bullet expansion tube he had inside the shop, the original bullet turned out to be almost a monolithic, with circumferential grooves like so many have today. But instead of a hollow-point or plastic tip, the front end had a tiny dab of lead, which Mike found really helped initial expansion, with far fewer manufacturing complications and less expense than plastic tips.

The only "problem" he had with potential customers is they increasingly asked if the "lead core" was bonded. It wasn't, but eventually he started bonding the tip-dab of lead, just for marketing purposes. It didn't make ANY difference in the penetration/expansion of his North Forks, but was a good marketing move.
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