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35 grain V-Max for bobcats in a .223

4.4K views 17 replies 8 participants last post by  SHampton  
#1 ·
I have an AR-15 I use as my predator/Arkansas Whitetail rifle. I have a DPMS Sweet 16 upper 1:9 twist and a 16 inch Colt upper with 1:7 twist. I have found an area that I am going to hunt hard for bobcats this fall. I hand load 62 grain barnes tripple shocks for whitetails and am starting on developing a good load for my uppers for bobcats/coyotes. I have heard of a lot of people using a 35 grain vmax bullet on coyotes and getting no exits. That is what I am trying to achieve on bobcats. Do you think I'll end up blowing out their back sides and ruining the hide? If so I am also toying with the idea of loading those tripple shocks down to around 2000fps and keeping my shots inside a 100 in hopes of just passing the bullet through with out much expansion. Any experience with the v-max's on bobcats or shooting heavy bullets slow out of a .223 to avoid hide damage? Thanks for any help!
 
#5 ·
With the faster twist rates of the AR platform guns you may need to download a 30 something grain bullet to prevent the bullets from making that telltale gray puff just out of the muzzle. I've never shot anything lighter than 45 grain stuff in my AR's but my 1:12 twist CZ bolt gun will shoot lighter stuff pretty good.

I was thinking about loading up some of the Barnes 62 grain tsx stuff myself. How's the accuracy and terminal performance?
 
#7 ·
I'd love to shoot fmj's but they are illegal to hunt with in Arkansas...so unfortunately they are not an option.
I had no idea they were not legal. Im just the opposite, I want to rip every predator I shoot in two. I was using Vmax but switched because I lost too many dawgs, just not enough carnage for my taste. I like a bloody mess when the bullet hits. I bet the lightest Vmax bullet you can buy travelling as fast as you can push it will do the trick for minor pelt damage.
 
#9 ·
You are going in the right direction. The 35's may or may not stabilize in the 1/9 barrel. If you just want to try some ammo without having to buy a lot of components that you may or may not use, the Winchester 45 grain HP's that are sold in the the 40 round boxes at WM have an excellent reputation and should stabilize in the 1/9 with no problem. Otherwise down load the 35-45 grain bullets a little and go for it.

Personally, I wouldn't even consider using the Barnes bullets for what you are wanting.
 
#13 ·
Beautiful cat!!! A shot gun is an option for me. From what I hear bobcats are easier to call into close range than a coyote. I have some 3 inch bismuth #2's left over from a goose hunt from a few years ago. You think they would do the job and not tear them up to bad?
 
#18 ·
If you hit a shoulder with the VMax it will rip the hide to pieces. 2 inches behind the shoulder all you will have is a small hole
.. The jack rabbit caught it in the shoulder, the coyote caught one behind the shoulder.
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Put it in the right spot and all it leaves is a small entry hole. The Jack was shot in the shoulder and it broke both his back legs in Several places!