This site is completely supported by donations; there are no corporate sponsors. We would be honoured if you would consider a small donation, to be used exclusively for forum expenses.
Joined: 09 August 2003
Status: Offline
Points: 373
Topic: 200 grain .38/.357 Posted: 11 August 2003 at 15:00
The Lyman 195 grain round nose bullet has intrigued me for years. I've loaded a few for plinking in both the .38 S&W, .38 Special, and .357 magnum. Have any of you here used this bullet on game? I'm curious as to how effective it is.AW
Joined: 13 June 2003
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2212
Posted: 11 August 2003 at 16:27
Never used any, been meaning to buy the mold seems like forever.
Just always something else takes priority.
"...A moral compass needs a butt end.Whatever direction France is pointing-towards collaboration with Nazis, accomodation with communists,...we can go the other way with a quiet conscience"-O'Rourke
Joined: 12 June 2003
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 169
Posted: 11 August 2003 at 16:34
Nope , can I shoot them in my Marlin 336 35 Rem. Yup still a rookie. AW got a couple of hundred loads on the 348 sent my way. Are you interested?, cuzz I will gratefully send them your way
Joined: 27 July 2003
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 54
Posted: 12 August 2003 at 06:32
No large game critters with Lyman 358430, and I've used it in the three calibers mentioned too. It flattens jackrabbits with any center-mass hit, and the two coyotes I've hit with it (357 velocities) collapsed at the shots. On the coyotes, both shots exited, and one of them went out sideways--so maybe these longer boolits tumble after impact? Dunno for sure, but the boolits are very accurate and seem to anchor small game well.
Joined: 09 August 2003
Status: Offline
Points: 373
Posted: 14 August 2003 at 01:19
I've heard for years that the 200 grain RN bullet in .38 Special had the reputation of yawing or tumbling after impact. This was supposedly why they had such a reputation for effectiveness. Can't help but think there might be something to the theory. I'd have to check the various twist rates in .38/.357 bores but it's a known fact that bullets that are only marginally stable tend to keyhole once they hit something. (like the early M16 did) AW
You want a flat point bullet for anything bigger than the coyotes. Push a 200 gr. FN out of a .35 rifle, and you will be able to deal with deer, and probably elk, quite nicely. I've been experimenting with .35 from a rifle, from 200-277 gr., and only see signs of yaw on the larger bullets when pushed too fast for the twist. With a pistol, I don't believe you could reach the 1650-1700fps threshhold for best performance with this weight bullet.
Joined: 09 August 2003
Status: Offline
Points: 373
Posted: 15 September 2003 at 14:16
I read one article online that said that the 200 grain .357 RN pushed hard out of a .357 revolver was a VERY serious big game load. (for a .357) Whether it's a lot different or a little different with a flat point or not was never addressed. You would think that an FP in the same weight would be better; but how much?AW
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum