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Originally Posted by pluckit
(Post 3824854)
So, no ideas on the difference between the point of impact between the two? Just wondering, even though I'm sure I'll find out sooner or later.
Bullet in the picture above is a .452. The .429 will not fit in the sabot(black sabot). It will fall out(too small). If you use the proper sabot for the .429 then it might hit fairly close to the .452 bullet, but you would have to ue the correct sabot for the .429 bullet. Only real way to know is too shoot, but it would shot pretty close as long as you use the proper sabot. Tom. |
Originally Posted by sabotloader
(Post 3824922)
Think you might be right - I did not know they made a XTP Mag in a 240 grain
Hornady and TC are a pretty tight relationship. Can't remember what cal that TC made but pretty sure that Hornady as of right now is the only one making the brass and bullet. |
The 240 grain .452 XTP magnum bullet is much sturdier than the 240 grain .430 XTP bullet. i consistently put the 240 grain .452 bullet through both shoulders of hogs that weigh over 250 pounds. That bullet should not be used on small whitetail deer; it may not expand.
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I do not believe it is the XTP Mag. The package states XTP and if it were the XTP MAG I think they would put that on the package as an extra selling point.
But I can tell you that it will knock a deer down hard. |
I would not trust the sabot color to determine caliber since whoever made the sabots (MMP or Harvester) wil make them in any color the vendor (TC in this case) wants. My initial guess would be that these are .44 cal bullets (.430) since it is the most common XTP/sabot combo available.
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Every 452 cal 240gr bullet ive seen from Hornady was a mag.
Good or bad...you decide. |
That is what was confusing me about this bullet. When you buy the .452 XTP in bulk they weigh 250 grains. It is the xtp magnum that weighs 240 grains. Probably less lead and a heavier copper cladding makes them weigh a little less. The .430 240 grain xtp is not the magnum if I remember right. My guess is that the ones t/c is packaging are the magnums. They might be a bit too slow to open up for deer.
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Oh well. It is pretty much agreed upon that it is a .452. And the main thing to me is that it shoots very well at 100 yards for me out of my Traditions Pursuit pushed by 2, 50 grain Pyrodex Pellets. Plus, I'm telling you, it knocks the snot out of a deer.
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Originally Posted by Gm54-120
(Post 3825056)
Every 452 cal 240gr bullet ive seen from Hornady was a mag.
Good or bad...you decide. When I was buying the 300 grain sabot combo from TC they didn't label it Mag but it is a MAG bullet. |
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the only visible difference in the nose of the bullet? The Mag being more rounded and the regular being more cone like?
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