Which twist rate for heaver projectiles?

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

AMT7

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Oct 14, 2013
Messages
2,745
Reaction score
1
Location
Tulsa Area
Admittedly dyslexia plauges me since birth. Just having trouble remembering and as to why helps.

Which twist rate 1:7 or 1:9 barrel is best for heavier 75-77gr 223/ 5.56x45 projectiles in 14.5" barrels? Think I had stated once 1:9 when negociating a deal but am thinking have it backwards after talking to a friend.
 
Joined
Nov 3, 2010
Messages
13,369
Reaction score
21,603
Location
yukon ok
Heavier or longer bullet is sometimes the debate.
You go 1:7 and it can over spin the lighter ones and MoBoost has done that and watched the bullet get out of the barrel and down range in mid air watch it vaporize.

Do a trajectory calculation and see the drop vs distance on the bullets you plan to use.
Heavier bullets get pushed less by wind..
 

SoonerP226

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
14,466
Reaction score
16,026
Location
Norman
IIRC, you'll want 1:7 for that heavy of a bullet. As I understand it, 1:9 is generally fast enough for most .223/5.56 projectiles, and the 1:7 only came about because the Army wanted to be able to use the M249's heavier boolits in the M16. I don't recall exactly where the line was, but I think 70+gr falls in the 1:7 camp.
 

AMT7

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Oct 14, 2013
Messages
2,745
Reaction score
1
Location
Tulsa Area
Heavier or longer bullet is sometimes the debate.
You go 1:7 and it can over spin the lighter ones and MoBoost has done that and watched the bullet get out of the barrel and down range in mid air watch it vaporize.

Do a trajectory calculation and see the drop vs distance on the bullets you plan to use.
Heavier bullets get pushed less by wind..
Thank you swampratt for that good info!
IIRC, you'll want 1:7 for that heavy of a bullet. As I understand it, 1:9 is generally fast enough for most .223/5.56 projectiles, and the 1:7 only came about because the Army wanted to be able to use the M249's heavier boolits in the M16. I don't recall exactly where the line was, but I think 70+gr falls in the 1:7 camp.
And suggestion on website calculators better at this specific issue with 223 5.56x45 than most?

I have these heavier rounds for hunting with 5 of us hunting JSE upper 1:7 twist 14.5" nitrided bbls. And one, (me) 1:9 PSA FN double hard chrome 14.5":

Federal Premium Gold Match 69gr
Same as above 77gr
Privi Partisan PPC match 75gr
 

Huckelberry75

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Apr 30, 2009
Messages
1,852
Reaction score
160
Location
OKC / Yukon-ish
All three of the rounds that you listed are stated to be match rounds, and typically advised against for hunting purposes. That being an age old debate, I will not open that can of worms. What ever you decide on to hunt with, put it in the right spot, but don't expect the bullets to perform like a proper hunting bullet. For pelt saving on coyotes, you would be fine, but I would personally not hunt medium to large game (deer) with them.
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom