At least they have gone back to the steel jacket with the copper coating now with their solids. I picked up a 458 cartridge in my back yard about a year ago. Very corroded old Hornady round that someone had dropped in times gone by.It was in a pile of old junk so maybe it was a victim of spring cleaning. It has a steel jacket and that same shape. Interesting when my son pulled the bullet from the very corroded case by hand, a stream of perfect powder poured out no clumps or caking at all. I would guess it is a post 81 round. Does anyone know when they went to the flats nose solid ?
@Nhoro
It was 2007 when Hornady released the DGS ( Dangerous Game Solid ) line and and replaced their older round nosed solids with meplat nosed solids .
In regards to the steel jacketed controversy , I believe that this is an accurate time frame of things :
* Until 1961 , Hornady used copper clad steel jackets in their solids ( which were round nosed and available in .308 , .375 and .458 calibre ) .
* From 1961 to 1980 , Hornady replaced the copper clad steel jacket with a cupronickel jacket . Their solids were still round nosed and .338 calibre solids were now added to the line up .
* From 1981 to 1990 , Hornady again replaced the cupronickel jacket with a copper clad steel jacket . The solids were round nosed and .416 calibre was not added to the lineup .
* From 1991 to 2006 , Hornady replaced the steel jacket with a copper jacket . The solids were still round nosed .
* In 2007 , Hornady released the DGS / DGX line . Their DGS solids were now all featuring meplat noses and all had copper clad steel jackets .
* In 2011 , Hornady began to offer 480 grain .458 calibre bullets with meplat noses ; in addition to their already existing .458 calibre 500 grain Hornady DGS solids .